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The United Kingdom contains many of the world's leading universities,
including the University of Cambridge, the University of Oxford
and the University of London (which incorporates, amongst
others, Imperial College and University College London), and
has produced many great scientists and engineers including
Sir Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin and Isambard Kingdom Brunel;
the nation is credited with many inventions including the
locomotive, vaccination, television, vacuum, and both the
internal combustion and the jet engine.
The English language has spread to all corners of the world
(primarily because of the countrys empire) and is referred
to as a global language. It is now taught as a
second language more than any other around the world. Over
the next few decades, it is estimated that approximately half
the worlds population will be proficient in the language.

William Shakespeare, famed playwright
Playwright William Shakespeare is arguably the most famous
writer in the history of the English language; other well-known
writers from the United Kingdom include the Brontë sisters
(Charlotte, Emily, and Anne), Jane Austen, William Thackeray,
J. R. R. Tolkien, John Milton, H. G. Wells and Charles Dickens.
Important poets include Lord Byron, Robert Burns, Lord Tennyson
and William Blake.
Notable composers from the United Kingdom have included William
Byrd, John Taverner, William Lawes, John Dowland, Thomas Tallis,
and Henry Purcell from the 16th and early 17th centuries,
and, more recently, Sir Edward Elgar, Sir Arthur Sullivan
(most famous for working with librettist Sir W. S. Gilbert),
Ralph Vaughan Williams and Benjamin Britten in the 19th and
20th. George Frideric Handel spent most of his composing life
in England.
The BBC is the oldest and perhaps the most respected broadcasting
network on the globe, with the BBC World Service radio channel
and its news output held in particularly high regard. The
other main television networks are ITV, Channel 4, five (TV)
and Sky Television. Popular programmes in the UK include the
three soaps Eastenders, Coronation Street and Emmerdale, as
well as the comedy news quiz Have I Got News For You and Reality
TV shows Big Brother and The X Factor. Various British TV
formats have been exported to other nations, notably Who Wants
To Be A Millionaire?, The Weakest Link and The Office.
The UK was, with the US, one of the two main contributors
in the development of rock and roll, and the UK has provided
some of the most famous rock stars, including the Beatles,
Queen, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, the Rolling Stones, The Who
and many others. The UK was at the forefront of punk rock
music in the 1970s with bands such as the Sex Pistols and
The Clash, and the subsequent rebirth of heavy metal with
bands such as Motörhead and Iron Maiden. In mid to late
'90s, the Britpop phenomenon has seen bands such as Oasis,
Blur, Radiohead and Coldplay gain international fame. The
UK is also at the forefront of electronica, with British artists
such as Aphex Twin, Talvin Singh, Nitin Sawhney and Lamb at
the cutting edge. The United Kingdom was also associated with
music from the Caribbean, with a large number of Jamaicans
and other Caribbean nationals being present in the UK.
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