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WHY english?

WHY english?

...WHY does it suddenly say "your comment" or "add an answer"?

All replies (18)

Hello Sabine,
Thank you for the link and the clarification about the portrait. Important things would be lost and it would be a shame if the portraits only remained on Migipedia temporarily!

@Istanbul: THANK YOU for the link and the hint, I'll have a look at it during one of my next work breaks :)

Have a nice weekend and best regards to Sabine AND to Istanbul, "maripac"

Guest

Hello Maripac

You have discovered a rather interesting technical problem by chance. The specialists have now tracked down the cause and are working on it. I hope that the Istanbul portrait (and a few other "invisible" articles) will reappear on the news list today!

Best regards,
Sabine, Migipedia team

Hello Sabine,

Thank you for your message.
The "discovery" is solely due to the fact that I think your idea (and the "realization") of these portraits is so great - and I would like to read through the various portraits again in more detail as soon as possible. The latter certainly several times, which is why I firmly hope that all the portraits will remain on Migipedia. The one of Istanbul in particular really "mustn't" disappear [unless by request]...
Kind regards and have a good day
"maripac"

Guest

Hello everyone, while we're on the subject of English terms, even if they are already two weeks old. What does "tryvertisings" mean, please? I assumed it was English and looked it up with Leo, but he doesn't know the word at all. Who can help me? Thanks a lot

@Nero12,

Based on the concept of tryvertising, a barbaric word as a result of the contraction of the words 'test' and 'advertising', these outlets are an old principle like the world: sampling.

Greetings
Istanbul

Guest

Hello Istanbul, thank you very much for the super quick reply. I'm new here and don't know how everything works yet. But what is barbaric about tryvertising? Testing, advertising, sampling all sound so harmless. Greetings

@Nero12,
I chose barbaric because I liked it better than bad or cruel. The word is not as common as "Brangelina" is or "Merkozy" was.

Euripides (Greek tragedian, 480-406 BC [Cyclops]) already knew that "tasting awakens the desire to buy". Behind this statement lies the simplest and most effective advertising measure available to a marketing strategist: The trial or product test.

Guest

Many thanks for the answer. Greetings