LL-L "Resources" 2004.11.28 (02) [E, G]

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Sun Nov 28 10:49:06 UTC 2004


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Onderwerp: Resources
Van: Tom Maguire <jmaguire at pie.xtec.es>

Van: Henry Pijffers <henry.pijffers at saxnot.com>

>Regarding Hanseatic cities, here's a nice list:
>
>http://www.hanse.org/hanse_staedte.php?lg=en
>
>This is a list of membercities of the present day Hanse, I'm not sure
>whether all these cities were members of the historical Hanse.

Yes. I also notice that they have a map of the UK and call it England.

Regards,

Tom
--
Carpe Diem.
-Visit Nlp in Education  http://www.xtec.es/~jmaguire
-Join Nlp-Education  mailto:nlp-education-subscribe at yahoogroups.com

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Onderwerp: Resources
Van: Felix Hülsey <felix.huelsey at gmx.de>

Dear Lowlanders,

Deutschlandradio Berlin, a nationwide German public radio station, will
bring a programme about the languages of Hamburg on Dec 07 at 01.05 p.m.
Central European Time. This is what their monthly magazine says:

"13.05 LänderReport - Länderschwerpunkt Hamburg

'Mehr als nur Missingsch' - Der Hamburger und seine Sprache
Von Knut Benzner

Hamburg hat drei Sprachen. Da ist, als offizielle Umgangssprache
sozusagen, das Hochdeutsch. Jede Hamburgerin, jeder Hamburger spricht es.
Dann, als zweite Sprache, wäre da das Platt. Vielleicht noch anzutreffen
in Neugraben, Moorfleet und Moorburg, und somit in den am Rande gelegenen
Stadtteilen, die an den Elbarmen liegen. Und dann gibt es diese
eigentümliche Hamburger Mischform, das Missingsch. Früher sprach man es
z.B. im Hafen, aber da der Hafen nur noch als Containerterminal Bestand
hat, spricht man dort kein Missingsch mehr. Dieses alte Hamburgisch gerät
zunehmend in Vergessenheit."

For their FM, SW, MW, satellite and DAB frequencies see
http://dradio.de/dlr/frequenzen/

This station can also be received online at www.dradio.de/dlr .

All the best from Cologne
Felix Hülsey

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