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Oxford University - BA Law degree - OPTIONAL PAPERS!!!

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Reply 20

Wow! Now I've seen the photo! That other dude on that other thread wasn't joking. Mate, I've just read this whole thread. Damn.

Dude, get some help!

Reply 21

Original post
by Mr Tangle
Wow! Now I've seen the photo! That other dude on that other thread wasn't joking. Mate, I've just read this whole thread. Damn.
Dude, get some help!
The report should be finished before Christmas and sent in mid January 2026 as Oxford won't be occupied with admissions decisions. 🙂

Also, to some other leading universities such as Cambridge, LSE, UCL, KCL, QMUL, SOAS, City St. George's, Durham, York, Warwick, Bristol, Manchester, Nottingham, Birmingham, Nottingham, Leeds, Southampton, Exeter, Lancaster, Loughborough, Liverpool and Newcastle.

The choice of optional papers will become much more 'open' and extremely gratifying as well as satisfying for all undergraduate Law students. Inshallah.

Reply 22

Original post
by Mr Tangle
Wow! Now I've seen the photo! That other dude on that other thread wasn't joking. Mate, I've just read this whole thread. Damn.
Dude, get some help!


Wait til you see the wedding menu…
Still waiting to see a picture of the bride.. Brazilian/ American apparently..

Reply 23

Original post
by tinkerbello
Wait til you see the wedding menu…
Still waiting to see a picture of the bride.. Brazilian/ American apparently..
I'm not allowed to show photos of my future wife yet but she will be moving here to London, UK and Dubai, UAE. She has a Italian-Portuguese--Brazilian mother and a Polish-Italian-Portuguese-Brazilian father. That's why, she's a model and actress.

More importantly, I can't wait to do an MBA at one of Oxford, Cambridge, London (Imperial, Warwick, LBS) or even Durham.

THE INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS STARTUPS IN THE 2030s
1. AI
2. Asset Management
3. Auto Parts
4. Automakers
5. Automotive Suppliers
6. Batteries
7. Beverages
8. Biotech
9. Building Materials
10. Cement
11. Clothing
12. Construction
13. Consumer Goods
14. Cosmetics and Beauty
15. Dairy Companies
16. eCommerce
17. Education
18. Electric Vehicles
19. Electronics
20. Eyewear
21. Flavours & Fragrances
22. Footwear
23. Furniture
24. Home & Kitchen Appliances
25. Internet
26. Internet of Things
27. Investment
28. IT Security
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30. Luxury Goods
31. Manufacturing
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33. Networking Hardware
34. Online Dating
35. Online Supermarket
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37. Packaging
38. Pharmaceuticals
39. Pizza
40. Professional Services
41. Property
42. Pulp and Paper
43. Renewable energy
44. Restaurant Chains
45. Retail
46. Semiconductors
47. Sports Goods
48. Staffing and Employment Services
49. Tech Hardware
50. Technology
51. Telecommunications Equipment
52. Tires
53. Toys
54. Video Games

I will be on the Sunday Times Rich List in 2045 hopefully!!! 😀 lol

...and a new college founded at both Oxford and Cambridge by the 2050s. 😉

Reply 24

The Incel is strong in this one!

Reply 25

Original post
by Mr Tangle
The Incel is strong in this one!


Be prepared for more lists and stats…

Reply 26

Market size value in 2025: USD 786.13 billion

Revenue forecast in 2033: USD 1,334.08 billion

The global furniture market is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 6.8% from 2025 to 2033 to reach USD 1.3 trillion by 2033.

Key Furniture Companies:

The following are the leading companies in the furniture market. These companies collectively hold the largest market

share and dictate industry trends.

IKEA

Ashley Furniture Industries Inc.

RH (Restoration Hardware)

Williams-Sonoma, Inc.

La-Z-Boy Inc.

Raymour & Flanigan

American Signature

Oppein Home Group Inc.

Jason Furniture (HangZhou) Co., Ltd.

Steelcase Inc.


More importantly, the largest markets for furniture sales are the USA, China, UK, France and Germany.

So, I will start a furniture company. 🙂

There is heaps of data that I have compiled and it would be too bad for your eyes to read it all. 😛 lol

PS: I will have done this for all 54 ideas. 😉

Reply 27

"There is heaps of data...". You write like that and you reckon you can get into Oxford?

Reply 28

Original post
by tinkerbello
Be prepared for more lists and stats…

Ha ha! You called it!

Reply 29

Original post
by Mr Tangle
Ha ha! You called it!


Tee Hee

Reply 30

Original post
by Mr Tangle
"There is heaps of data...". You write like that and you reckon you can get into Oxford?
I could go to the United States of America!!! 😀 lol


All the above are: "Needs Blind" admission for international students. 😉

Reply 31

When did they start calling it BA Law?

Reply 32

Original post
by Trinculo
When did they start calling it BA Law?
Since it was establised in the 1200s.

Reply 33

Original post
by thegeek888
Since it was establised in the 1200s.

For hundreds of years the only degree awarded by the university was the Bachelor of the Arts- and that was it. Blackstone held a BA, and it wasn't until much later that there was even study of the common law. Post reformation of the colleges and faculties in the late 1800s, and the award of "other" degrees - that's when the BA Jurisprudence was introuduced. I'm not aware there was ever a "BA Law".

Reply 34

Original post
by Trinculo
For hundreds of years the only degree awarded by the university was the Bachelor of the Arts- and that was it. Blackstone held a BA, and it wasn't until much later that there was even study of the common law. Post reformation of the colleges and faculties in the late 1800s, and the award of "other" degrees - that's when the BA Jurisprudence was introuduced. I'm not aware there was ever a "BA Law".
Even Cambridge has been known as BA Law and not LLB Law.

Cambridge Law - then & now | BA Law

Reply 35

At Oxford It’s never been BA in Law, it’s formally a BA in Jurisprudence.

Reply 36

Original post
by thegeek888
Even Cambridge has been known as BA Law and not LLB Law.
Cambridge Law - then & now | BA Law

Why have you suddenely started talking about a different university?

Reply 37

Original post
by thegeek888
Since it was establised in the 1200s.

Dude, you know nothing. In the Middle Ages, Oxford taught the Trivium and the Quadrivium. Google them. As Trinculo says, Oxford didn't teach English Law until much later. Do you even know who Blackstone was? The degree is called Jurisprudence.There's no BA Law at Oxford. Who cares what the Tabs call their degrees? BA Colouring In maybe. You might be able to get one of those. Not sure though.

Reply 38

Original post
by Cbt33
At Oxford It’s never been BA in Law, it’s formally a BA in Jurisprudence.
What's the big deal? 😧 Because everywhere else calls it a LLB degree and Cambridge calls it a BA degree.

Reply 39

Original post
by Mr Tangle
Dude, you know nothing. In the Middle Ages, Oxford taught the Trivium and the Quadrivium. Google them. As Trinculo says, Oxford didn't teach English Law until much later. Do you even know who Blackstone was? The degree is called Jurisprudence.There's no BA Law at Oxford. Who cares what the Tabs call their degrees? BA Colouring In maybe. You might be able to get one of those. Not sure though.
Sir William Blackstone was also an accountant too. So, I admire him very much. 🙂

William Blackstone - Wikipedia

Surely Oxford should now call it simply: "BA in Law" like Cambridge?
(edited 6 months ago)

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