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Brief introduction of characteristic majors of Beijing Foreign Studies University
Professional English of Beijing Foreign Studies University;

College is the oldest, most traditional and most advantageous college in Beijing Foreign Studies University. Now it has four departments: English Department, Foreign Affairs Department, Journalism Department and Law Department. Its English language and literature discipline is also a national key discipline and characteristic discipline. The popularity of British colleges also comes from: Xu Guozhang, a famous English educator in China; He Shenshen, co-author of New Concept English (New Edition); Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing; Sun Zhenyu, former Minister of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation; Yang Lan and Xu Gehui, famous program hosts; And other social celebrities we are all familiar with.

International Business School:

It can be called the school with the most courses in Beijing Foreign Studies University, because students here have to take all kinds of English courses like British colleges, but also learn the corresponding professional knowledge of economic management, which is equivalent to studying a double degree, so that the compound talents trained by BCCHK have an advantage in this competitive era!

Advanced translation:

As the name implies, the College was established to train senior translators. It is also the training department for translators of the United Nations, and has trained a large number of simultaneous interpreters and translators for the United Nations.

Other features:

There are German Department, European Language Department and Asian-African Language Department, among which German language and literature in German Department is a national key discipline, and German is also a national specialty of Beijing Foreign Studies University and the only national key discipline in China. Most European languages are non-common languages in Europe, including Polish, Czech, Romanian, Serbian, Hungarian, Bulgarian, Albanian, Finnish, Slovak, Dutch, Croatian, Greek, Norwegian, Danish and Icelandic. Similarly, the Asian-African language family mainly focuses on the teaching and research of non-common languages in Asia and Africa, including Burmese, Thai, Indonesian, Malay, Sinhalese, Turkish, Korean (Korean), Swahili, Hausa, Cambodian, Lao and Vietnamese. Sinhala and Hausa are the only languages in China, while Malay and Turkish stand out among local universities in China.