Friederike Engel is a German football defender, currently playing for Hamburger SV in the Frauen Bundesliga. She has also played for American Eagles in the NCAA.
As an Under-19 international she won the 2006 U-19 European Championship.
The Cyprus Institute of Marketing (CIM) was established in 1978 and is situated in Nicosia and Limassol.
It is registered with the Cyprus Ministry of Education and is the first Business School to be established in Cyprus and among the older tertiary education providers in Cyprus. In addition to marketing, CIM offers programs in accounting and finance, HR, Shipping, and Law. It awards its own recognised Diplomas, Bachelors, and Masters. Its MBA was ranked 16th in Europe according to www.findyourMBA.com
In 1984, a daughter school was opened in Limassol, the second largest city in Cyprus.
Serbay Can (born 30 June 1998), is a Turkish professional football player, who plays for Turkish club Osmaniyespor FK on loan from Adanaspor as a left back.
British-born confused Desi (BBCD) is a slang term and ethnic generational identifier used within the South Asian diaspora to describe people of South Asian descent who were born or raised in the United Kingdom and are perceived by other South Asians as confused about their cultural identity. It belongs to a family of similar labels applied to diaspora-raised South Asians in other countries, including American-born confused Desi (ABCD) and Canadian-born confused Desi (CBCD), as well as terms such as coconut and whitewash for those regarded as having adopted Western culture. The term is used as a derogatory label by some community members, implying that those born in Britain have forgotten or abandoned their South Asian roots, though it is also used with self-deprecating humour or as a marker of shared experience. The pattern of applying such labels to diaspora-raised South Asians has been discussed in the context of South Asian diaspora literature.
The term appears in the 2011 mainstream Bollywood film Mere Brother Ki Dulhan, in which a character uses it as an insult directed at a British-raised woman. It also appears in Before the Millennium (2025), a play by British Pakistani playwright Karim Khan staged at the Old Fire Station, Oxford, in which a character applies it to a newcomer; a review in The Guardian noted its use. The term has also been noted in academic literature on the British Punjabi diaspora.