Around the weblogs 1. There's a new Turkish-language IP blog though, as this Kat understands, there will be English summaries of the posts too for the benefit of non-Turkish-speaking readers. It's called IP Era and you can check it out here. The brains behind this blog are Baran Çakır and his friends, who are all Turkish students. The IPKat and Merpel wish them the best of luck. Another new blog on the block comes from Hungary: it's the Védjegy Blog ("Mark Blog", according to Google Translate) and it's composed by the Kocsis & Szénássy Ügyvédi Iroda law firm, Budapest. You can check it out here. The text is mainly Hungarian, but there's some English there too. Merpel wonders whether, given the fact that Hungarian and Turkish languages have some points of similarity, some lucky Turks might be able to understand the Hungarian blog, and vice versa ... Finally, the IPKat congratulates katfriend and occasional guest blogger Jani Ihalainen on the first birthday of his own blog, IP Iustitia. Merpel notes a Finnish surname here and wonders: isn't the Finnish language related to Hungarian too?
What all IP solo practitioners must be: ever ready (and leak-proof? speculates Merpel) |
Not sexy, maybe, but scores well for functionality |
You may think that beast is not sexy Jeremy but I bet his/her partner thinks otherwise. Ta for the plug again; if people come along we can tell them a few mediator secrets !
ReplyDeleteHungarian and Finnish are as much mutually intelligible as English and Farsi (the nearest common ancestor is about equally far back in time for both pairs). Also, Turkish is not linguistically related to either, the so-called Ural-Altaic hypothesis has been dead and buried for about a century by now.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Anna, for putting us right -- though I for one am always sad to bury a good myth.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the congratulations, and I'm quite surprised the languages aren't related as I also thought (thanks Anna for that nice little correction to even this expat Finn's knowledge set).
ReplyDelete