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Website. hvg.hu. ISSN. 1217-9647. HVG (formerly called Heti Világgazdaság; lit. 'Weekly World Economy') [1] has been Hungary ’s leading economic and political weekly both in terms of circulation and readership [2][3][4] since it was founded in 1979. [5] It is closely modeled on The Economist in style and content. [6][7]
Commercial. Yes. Launched. 1 December 1998. OCLC number. 806226699. Origo (stylised as ORIGO, previously as [origo]) is a major Hungarian-language news website founded in 1998 by telecommunications company MATÁV. In 2018, Origo was the third most visited Hungarian website. [1]
ISSN. 1585-3241. Index.hu is a Hungarian news website covering both Hungarian and international news. In 2018, it was the most visited Hungarian website with an average of 1.5 million daily readers. [1] While most of the website's articles are written in Hungarian, Index also publishes several articles in English every week.
Filmvilág (art magazine) FourFourTwo (football magazine) GEO (geography, science, history, nature) Glamour (women's magazine) InStyle (women’s fashion magazine) Joy (women's magazine) Kaliber (magazine for guns) Kockás (comics magazine) Lakáskultúra (premium home furnishings and lifestyle magazine)
Nicole Chavez, CNN. September 5, 2024 at 1:57 PM. Redlands Police Department. A husband and wife who settled at a nudist ranch nestled in a remote California canyon had been missing for days when ...
Cheryl Burke shared her initial reaction to fellow Dancing with the Stars dancer Artem Chigvintsev’s arrest amid suspicion of domestic violence in an episode of her podcast released just hours ...
The United Nations estimates that there have been nearly 40,000 cases of hepatitis A in Gaza since the war began, compared to just 85 from October 2022 to July 2023. That’s in addition to more ...
Since the 1960s it was well known that a large gas field existed next to Makó. The disadvantages are the depth of the gas deposit at about 5,000 metres (16,000 ft) as well as the very high pressures and temperatures, [2] the large thermal increase with depth in Hungary about 20 metres (66 ft) per degree Celsius compared to a world-average 50 metres (160 ft) per degree Celsius).