If you sang “Auld Lang Syne” on New Year’s Eve, you were speaking Scots. The lyricist? Poet Robert (aka Rabbie) Burns.
If you have any idea, please open Issue or Pull request. Veryl adopts syntax optimized for logic design while being based on a familiar basic syntax for SystemVerilog experts. This optimization ...
Duncan Stangel is a first-year global affairs major at Notre Dame. Currently residing in Alumni Hall (the center of the ...
An assembly to mark Burns Night (25 January), a night commonly celebrated in Scotland and beyond – where friends and family ...
I know this is a little late but, as it’s my first article of the year, I’d like to start by wishing you all a very happy and prosperous new ...
Happy New Year to all of our readers, and welcome to the first Global Daily of 2025! The S&P500 closed 1.26% higher on Friday (it’s second trading day of the year) after a 0.2% fall the prior day. US ...
This year, shoppers may need to be aware of foods that bring bad luck literally—in the case of recalls and even bacteria-related illness. Free rides are being offered on New Year's Eve in many ...
In many English-speaking countries, the song Auld Lang Syne is associated with farewelling the past year. The lyrics originally formed a poem written in Scots, an early Scottish language or ...
Among the many, there’s the classic “Auld Lang Syne,” and, of course ... banger about being excited for nightfall. Though the lyrics were about her lover finally coming and being ...
Another year is over, so it's only fitting we acknowledge some of the people who went Under The Auld Pump in 2024.