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The Polish alphabet (Polish: alfabet polski, abecadło) is the script of the Polish language, the basis for the Polish system of orthography. It is based on the Latin alphabet but includes certain letters (9) with diacritics : the acute accent – kreska : ć, ń, ó, ś, ź ; the overdot – kropka : ż ; the tail or ogonek – ą, ę ; and ...
NK.pl then ranked among the top five websites used in Poland, behind Google.pl, Onet.pl, and Wirtualna Polska, and it was visited by more than 50% of Polish Internet users each month (with 10% of the traffic coming from abroad). [4] As of July 2009 86% of its users lived in Poland, according to Alexa. The site was also popular in Norway, where ...
The logo of the 10th anniversary celebration of the Polish Wikipedia. The Polish Wikipedia was created in September 2001 under the domain wiki.rozeta.com.pl. [2] It was originally hosted by a server in a shoebox inside the wardrobe of one of its founders, Paweł Jochym. [2]
From a .pl domain name: This is a redirect from a domain name to an article about an associated entity or website, which is more often referred to by its official name than by its domain name. Use this redirect link (without piping) when the link in the context specifically concerns the website. Other pages using this link should be updated to ...
The origin of the district's name derives from the Polish word bór ('conifer forest'), which was located on the village itself. Later the name of the settlement was Germanized by the Germans living in Breslau, as a result of which the name shifted to phonetically similar German Burg ('castle').
Interia, formerly Interia.pl, is a large Polish web portal and online news platform launched in 2000 in Kraków, Poland. It is the 4th largest online news source in the country. It is the 4th largest online news source in the country.
This Polish corporation or company article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Wirtualna Polska was created by Leszek Bogdanowicz, Damian Woźniak, Marek Borzestowski and Jacek Kawalec at Politechnika Gdańska in Gdańsk, who met each other via the Internet. The early forum of ideas turned in March 1995 into a service using the name Wirtualna Polska.