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Re: adjonisten (was Re: vatra romaneasca, vagy mi a fen (mind) |
17 sor |
(cikkei) |
2. |
Re: Jeno Dsida, poet (mind) |
18 sor |
(cikkei) |
3. |
Re: Hungarian and Sumerian? (mind) |
12 sor |
(cikkei) |
4. |
Re: Source for Hungarian wine (mind) |
18 sor |
(cikkei) |
5. |
Hungarian Royal Institute of Midwifery of Szegedin (mind) |
2 sor |
(cikkei) |
6. |
Re: Hungarian and Sumerian? (mind) |
26 sor |
(cikkei) |
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+ - | Re: adjonisten (was Re: vatra romaneasca, vagy mi a fen (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
In > "Zoli Fekete, keeper of hung
arian-faq" > writes:
>'what goes around, comes around'. Which is not to say that
>occasional bad experience of Romanian speakers in areas almost
>exclusively populated by Hungarians is either commensurable to or
>justification for the anti-Hungarian measures by the state...
Again: what are those "anti-Hungarian measures" taken by the Romanian
state?
Dan
--
Dan Pop
CERN, CN Division
Email:
Mail: CERN - PPE, Bat. 31 R-004, CH-1211 Geneve 23, Switzerland
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+ - | Re: Jeno Dsida, poet (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
Here is the posting again. The gentlement is
Peter I. Hidas, Montreal
Dsida, Jeno (Szatmar, May 17, 1907; died June 7 1938, at Cluj
(Kolozsvar)
Dsida was a Hungarian poet living in Romania. He studied law at
Kolozsvar and eventually worked at various law offices at Szatmar an
d Kolozsvar. He edited various literary journals in the 1920s and 1930s.
He eventually became the secretary of the Romanian branch o
f the Pen Club. He died at a young age. He was a most promising talent
amongst the writers of Transylvania. His works were published
from 1928 on. HIs selected works were published in Budapest in 1958.
(Leselkedo Magany, Kolozsvar, 1928; Nagycsutortok, Kolzsvar, 1933,
Magyar Karavan Italian keresztul, Nagyvarad, 1933; Angyalok citer
ajan, Kolozsvar, 1938; Valogatott versek, Budapest 1944; toparti
konyorges, 1958; Arany es kek szavakkal, 1965.
For English translation search the Hungarian Quarterly or the New
Hungarian Quarterly.
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+ - | Re: Hungarian and Sumerian? (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
Peter I. Hidas ) wrote:
: There is no connection...
^^ ^^ ^^^^^^^^^^
<clip>
probably not, but never say never... it's nice to dream and keep kids from
dope and stealing automobile hubcaps... the slurry of myth-mix remains a
curiosity for many hungarians, one thing is sure: not enough search has been
done, although "re-search" with preconceived notions is accepted as fact!
why not keep the question open? (or do you know somethings others don't?)...
ja'nos
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+ - | Re: Source for Hungarian wine (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
Reporting from another part of the USA...back in the mid-1980s the better
wine stores around here (Haskells, Surdyks, France 44) used to carry
really great Hungarian wines, Badacsony Szurkebarat and other Balaton-area
wines, Somlo, Tokaji in lower grades for a decent price. Surdyks used to
have a half bottle of Tokaji Aszu in a higher grade from the early 1960s
in their locked case with the Chateau Margaux and 80-year-old Port.
For some reason, after about 1989 all the good stuff disappeared around
here, and all we usually see now are cheapie-cheapie varietals with
tacky labels, or the ubiquitous Egri Bikaver. The distributors up here
must have had a shuffle or something.
--
*********************************************************************
Paranoia! Even Goya...
couldn't draw ya... --T. Pynchon Minneapolis MN USA
*********************************************************************
>>>Tour d'Ivoire: 612-425-0554<<<
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+ - | Hungarian Royal Institute of Midwifery of Szegedin (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
|
Would anyone have information on the Royal Hungarian Institute of Szegedin
(szeged)? in operation according to one certificate in 1901.
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+ - | Re: Hungarian and Sumerian? (mind) |
VÁLASZ |
Feladó: (cikkei)
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(AND Books) writes:
>: RickB771 ) wrote:
>: : Hungarian and ancient sumerian language?
>: and no one knows the answer. This Sumer Magyar relationships is
>: like the Hun Hungarian relationship.
>i agree, but it's nice to think about the possible connections...
Another connection like that is the Hungarian-Japanese. It's an unfounded
theory but there's a striking similarity in the "linguistic way of thinking"
in these languages, apart from the fact that Japanese is also an aggluting
(sp?) language, i.e. it works with suffixes like the Hungarian does.
>I wonder if there are any currently accepted academicians in hu working on
>these questions of origin?
Frankly, I doubt it. This Sumer debate is over.
>ja'nos
--
Pm
>----
Miklos Prisznyak (KFKI RMKI Theor. Dep. Budapest, Hungary H-1525 P.O.B 49)
WWW page: http://sgi30.rmki.kfki.hu/~prisz/prisz.html
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