User talk:Priceangle

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HI and welcome. Just wondering how a user who doesn't even have a talk page let alone a user page can produce a high quality new article and have the Wiki-know how? ♦ Sir Blofeld ♦ "I've been expecting you" 12:41, 17 March 2007 (UTC)

I'm smart..--Priceangle 12:42, 17 March 2007 (UTC)

It looks like the work of a seasoned wikipedian. You're not a sock puppet? If not this is terrific Great work! ♦ Sir Blofeld ♦ "I've been expecting you" 12:43, 17 March 2007 (UTC)

I'm not, but if you want I am... I like to fuck the others as well, especially Dahn...Alex, Khoikhoi, Mikka, etc...

Looks like a copy of Székely ♦ Sir Blofeld ♦ "I've been expecting you" 12:46, 17 March 2007 (UTC)

Alex are you sure that I'm not a sock?

yes it is


The original text for

The keep deleting good stuff

Székely language should be this one:


Székely
Székely 
Pronunciation: [ˈmɒɟɒr̪]
Spoken in: areas in Romania, Serbia, Ukraine
Total speakers: 650,000 
Ranking: 57
Language family: Uralic
 Finno-Ugric
  Ugric
   Székely 
Writing system: Latin alphabet (Hungarian variant
Official status
Official language in: Romania
Regulated by: Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Language codes
ISO 639-1: hu
ISO 639-2: hun
ISO 639-3: hun
Hungarian language
Alphabet, including ő ű and
cs dz dzs gy ly ny sz ty zs
Phonetics and phonology
Vowel harmony
Grammar

   Noun phrases
   Verbs

T-V distinction
Regulatory body
Hungarian name
Language history

   Sound correspondences

Tongue-twisters

Hungarian pronunciation of EnglishOld Hungarian scriptEnglish words from Hungarian

This box: view  talk  edit

Szelely language or Szelely dialect of Hungarian. (Székely nyelv listen ) is a Finno-Ugric language, and more specifically a Ugric language, related to the Hungarian. As one of the small number of modern European languages which do not belong to the Indo-European languages ndo-European language family, it has always been of great interest to linguists.

[edit] History

Szekelys were one of the three recognized groups in Transylvania during it's Hungarian rule and during it's role as a principality and subject to Vienna. The other two were the Magyars and the Saxon Germans. The Szekelys have always been a little separate. They were given special rights to not pay taxes, for which they were to guard Hungary's borders. There is even a Szekely language, which historians think is close to the early Magyar language. Legend says that the Szekely people are descendants from Attila the Hun himself. This is why many Szekely children are named Attila. As to whether this is true can be debated. Nowadays, there is a real distinction between Szekely and Magyar in Romania. Szeklers are proud of their special history, and consider themselves distinct from the Magyar ethnic folk.

According to a fairly well accepted theory, originally they lived in Transdanubia and they might have been already living in the Danubian basin before 996, that is, before the official date of the Hungarian arrival there. Some historians think that they are the descendents of the Avars, but there is problem with this hypothesis because the Szeklers were Hungarian speaking by the time of their settling down in Transylvania. Nowadays the debate centers around whether perhaps the Szeklers were Hungarians who had settled in today's Hungary 100-200 years earlier than 996.

The majority of Hungarian scholars takes the codex to be a hoax of Sámuel Literáti Nemes (1796–1842), Transylvanian-Hungarian antiquarian, co-founder of the National Széchényi Library in Budapest, infamous for many historical forgeries (made mostly in the 1830's) which even deceived some of the most renowned Hungarian scholars of the time. This opinion goes back as far as 1866, to [hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Szabó_Károly Károly Szabó] (1824-1890), Hungarian historian. (See the Bibliograhy below "Of the Old Hun-Székely Writing System".) This opinion is also held by Fejérpataky (187 , Pintér (1930). Béla Tóth (1899) and Csaba Csapodi (1973) mention this opinion as a possibility. (For their titles, see the Bibliography below.)

[edit] References

  • Ciubotaru, Ion H. (199 , Catolicii din Moldova, Iasi
  • Giurescu, Constantin (1972) Chronological History of Romania, Bucharest
  • Guglielmino, C R, De Silvestri, A, Beres, J (2000), Probable ancestors of Hungarian ethnic groups: an admixture analysis, Ann. Human Genetics, 64, pp124-159
  • Kapalo, James A. (1996), The Moldavian Csángós: 'National Minority' or 'Local Ethnie'?
  • Martinas, Dumitru (1999), The Origins of the Changos, The Center for Romanian Studies, Iasi
  • Tánczos, Vilmos (199 , Hungarian in Moldavia, Teleki László Foundation, www.kia.hu/konyvtar/erdely/moldvang.htm


[edit] See also

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