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Byudjeten konsultant. Byuletin Voenen glas. Bulgaria Today. Bulgaria Today/Bulgaria Dnes. Bulgarian army. Bulgarian farmer. Bulgarian transport newspaper. Bulgarian writer.
The Telegraph (Телеграф) is a Bulgarian national daily newspaper published in Sofia. It was established in January 2005 as a low-cost, short-article alternative to the mainstream press. Its circulation rose rapidly: in May 2005 it was 38,000, [1] but by April 2007 it had reached 80,000. [2] By early 2008, it was estimated to be the ...
Category:Newspapers published in Bulgaria. Appearance. Bulgaria portal. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Newspapers of Bulgaria. See also: Category:Bulgarian-language newspapers.
Television, magazines, and newspapers in Bulgaria are all operated by both state-owned and for-profit corporations which depend on advertising, subscription, and other sales-related revenues. The Constitution of Bulgaria guarantees freedom of speech. As a country in transition, Bulgaria's media system is under transformation.
ISSN. 1311-7661. Website. www.dnevnik.bg. Dnevnik (Bulgarian: Дневник, Journal) is a business-oriented Bulgarian daily newspaper, that is published Monday - Friday in Sofia since 2001. Until early 2005, it was printed in broadsheet format, the last Bulgarian daily to use the large format. It adopted a compact format after research in ...
Pages in category "Daily newspapers published in Bulgaria" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
One of the most popular features in the newspaper is the daily cartoon Ivancho i Mariyka, drawn by the well-known Bulgarian cartoonist Ivaylo Ninov, which also exists in animation version. [5] The newspaper was a part of the German WAZ media group until 2010 [6] when it was acquired by the Media Group Bulgaria, LLC. [7]
Trud. (Bulgarian newspaper) Trud (Bulgarian: Труд, English: Labor), is a Bulgarian tabloid daily newspaper. The newspaper's first issue came out on 1 March 1936, making it one of the oldest Bulgarian newspapers still in existence. From 3 January 1994 to 31 December 2008 it was known as Dneven Trud (Дневен Труд, Daily Labor).