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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Eleanor Morgan)
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Britain’s multilingual children: ‘We speak whatever language gets the job done’
In modern Britain, millions of kids grow up learning two languages or more – and experts believe fluidity in language has some surprising advantagesFor many three-year-olds growing up in the UK, it’s challenging enough to learn and master one language, usually English. Yet there’s another rising demographic of young children who are acquiring and absorbing vocabulary from multiple languages before they even start primary school.In 2021 there were around 6 million people with non-British national
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Helena Smith in Mykonos)
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Mykonos has had its fill of champagne-fuelled tourism
The Greek island makes a mint as a playground for rich and famous visitors. But locals say development has gone too farIt’s 3pm at Rizes, a farm in the heart of Mykonos, and there is not a champagne bottle in sight, a sunbed to lounge on, or a scintilla of music that might drown the sound of the winds breezing through the nearby bamboo.That’s because Nikos Zouganelis, “born and bred” on the party island, has deliberately sought to do something new. “At Rizes we want to live the Mykonos of our ro
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Emily Dugan)
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Russia-Ukraine war: ‘morale and discipline’ problems hampering Russian forces, says MoD – live
British intelligence says troops probably aggrieved over pay issues; Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant relying on reserve power amid more shellingWhat we know on day 193 of the invasionRussian forces have hit multiple residential targets in the south central part of Ukraine overnight, according to Vitaliy Kim, governor of Mykolaiv.Posting on his Telegram account, he said that Russian shelling had damaged homes, three hospitals, two education facilities, a hotel and a museum in the area. Continue readi
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Peter Walker Political correspondent)
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Liz Truss says it is fair to prioritise tax cuts that benefit high earners more
Prospective PM attacks ‘lens of redistribution’ after being told that national insurance cut will help rich 250 times more than poorestIt is fair to prioritise tax cuts that benefit the highest earners 250 times more than the poorest, Liz Truss has said, insisting it is wrong to view all economic policy through the “lens of redistribution”.In her most thorough interview in the Conservative leadership campaign, a day before she is widely expected to be declared the winner, Truss said she would pr
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Nigel Slater)
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Nigel Slater’s recipes for beetroot and pomegranate salad, and rice pudding and damson sauce
Embrace the change in season with a dreamy rice pudding and a piquantly autumn saladThe tail end of a long summer, and one of my favourite points in the year for food shopping. The last of the damsons sit in a cardboard punnet on the table alongside the green leaves of bunches of beetroot. The purple plums are destined for both breakfast treat and as a sauce for chilled rice pudding; the beetroot is for a late-summer salad.Those deep maroon roots, a solidly reassuring presence in the fridge, are
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Torsten Bell)
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Education’s links to liberal views contain a degree of chicken and egg | Torsten Bell
Tory fears over ‘woke warriors’ exaggerate the influence of universitiesHigher education is one of Britain’s big success stories but also the subject of intense political division. How many people should go to university, and how that education should be paid for, is hotly debated.However, it’s not just cost that leads some Conservative politicians to worry about so many people studying. It’s the fear of the effect it might have, that universities are where their enemies in the culture wars – th
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Susannah Clapp)
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The week in theatre: The Narcissist; Into the Woods – review
Minerva, Chichester; Theatre Royal BathChristopher Shinn’s new play of post-Trump politics finds complex characters lost in ego and addiction, while Terry Gilliam and Leah Hausman’s take on Sondheim is just a bit too muchWhat a zinging evening at Chichester. Christopher Shinn’s new play The Narcissist, set in 2017, centres on a former American presidential adviser who announces that in a digitally transfixed, utterly individualistic age, voters engage with politics as they do with dating apps: t
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Larry Elliott)
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UK must be put on an economic war footing for the coming recession | Larry Elliott
Incoming prime minister’s only priority over next few weeks should be to avoid meltdownThe waiting is almost over. Conservative party members have made their choice. This week a new prime minister will be installed in Downing Street at the most testing time imaginable. Even February 1974, when Harold Wilson came to power and ended Britain’s three-day week, doesn’t really match up to the omni-crisis with which Boris Johnson’s successor has to grapple. Arguably, it is the grimmest inheritance sinc
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Sarah Turner)
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Artful lodgers: 10 great Arts and Crafts hotels and houses in Britain
A selection of the country’s best destination boltholes for those who love the design and fine arts movementWith medieval origins and largely built in Tudor times, Owlpen Manor is deeply revered in Arts and Crafts circles. In the 1920s, architect Norman Jewson bought and restored it alongside key Arts and Crafts figure Ernest Gimson, furniture maker and architect, using traditional methods and craftspeople trained by Morris. Still privately owned, Owlpen has a collection of nine self-catering co
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (John Bartlett in Santiago)
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Vote on world’s most progressive constitution begins in Chile
Approval would replace Pinochet-era document, recognizing Chile’s Indigenous peoples and requiring action on the climate crisisChileans head to the polls today to either approve or reject what has been described as the world’s most progressive constitution, which would replace the 1980 document drawn up during Gen Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship.The referendum marks the culmination of three tumultuous years of protest and political upheaval, in which a protest over subway prices grew into a broa