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The British University in Egypt ( BUE; Arabic: الجامعة البريطانية فى مصر, romanized : Al-Jāmi‘a al-Bāritāneya fe-Mīsr) is a private Egyptian university in El Shorouk City, Cairo, Egypt. Founded in September 2005, [7] through an inter-governmental agreement, it provides a British education style and awards degrees ...
The British Council is a charity governed by Royal Charter. It is also a public corporation and an executive nondepartmental public body (NDPB), sponsored by the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. Its headquarters are in Stratford, London. Its chair is Paul Thompson, and its CEO is Scott McDonald .
The British School, Alexandria. The British School, Alexandria ( Arabic: المدرسة البريطانية بالاسكندرية) is a British international school in Roushdy, [1] in Alexandria, Egypt. [2] It serves students ages 3–18. [1]
Founded over 30 years ago, COBIS is governed by an elected executive committee consisting of headteachers and governors from member schools worldwide. The association is a constituent member of the Independent Schools Council and operates on a not-for-profit basis to reflect being a UK-registered company 'Limited by Guarantee'.
ERU. 2006. [48] European Universities in Egypt (University of London, University of Central Lancashire, University of East London) EUE. 2021 (2021, 2021, 2024) [49] Future University in Egypt. FUE.
Ambassadors. 1936–1946: Sir Miles Lampson. 1946–1950: Sir Ronald Ian Campbell. 1950–1955: Sir Ralph Stevenson. 1955–1956: Sir Humphrey Trevelyan. 1956–1959: Break in relations due to Suez Crisis. 1959–1961: Sir Colin Crowe ( Chargé d'affaires) 1961–1964: Sir Harold Beeley. 1964–1965: Sir George Humphrey Middleton.
ChatGPT is a chatbot and virtual assistant developed by OpenAI and launched on November 30, 2022. Based on large language models (LLMs), it enables users to refine and steer a conversation towards a desired length, format, style, level of detail, and language.
Egypt has received United States foreign aid since 1979 (an average of $2.2 billion per year) and is the third-largest recipient of such funds from the United States following the Iraq war. Egypt's economy mainly relies on these sources of income: tourism, remittances from Egyptians working abroad and revenues from the Suez Canal.