νέα ανακάλυψη - traducción al Inglés
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νέα ανακάλυψη - traducción al Inglés

NEWSPAPER
Τα Νέα; Ta nea

νέα ανακάλυψη      
rediscovery
rediscovery      
n. νέα ανακάλυψη
modern greek         
  • Pontic]] in orange. [[Cappadocian Greek]] in green, with green dots indicating individual Cappadocian Greek villages in 1910.<ref name="Dawkins, R.M 1916" />
  • Calabrian]] dialects are spoken
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  • Street sign in [[Rethymno]] in honor of [[Psara]] island: ''Psaron (in genitive) Street, historic island of the 1821 Revolution''
  • Spoken Modern Greek
DIALECTS AND VARIETIES OF THE GREEK LANGUAGE SPOKEN IN THE MODERN ERA
Modern Greek language; Modern Greek Koine; ISO 639:ell; Modern greek; Modern Hellenic; New Greek; Common words and phrases in Modern Greek; Modern Greek (language); ISO 639:el; Modern Greek language (1453-); Νέα ελληνικά; Νεοελληνική γλώσσα; Neo-Hellenic; Andriotis dictionary; Andriotis Dictionary; Modern Hellenic language; Neo-Hellenic language; Neo Hellenic language; Neo Hellenic; Modern Greek (1453-); ISO 639-1:el; ISO 639:gre
νεοελληνικός

Definición

Neo-Hellenic
·add. ·noun ·same·as Romaic.

Wikipedia

Ta Nea

Ta Nea (Greek: Τα Νέα; Translation: The News) is a daily newspaper published in Athens. It was owned by Lambrakis Press Group (DOL), which also published the newspaper To Vima. The assets of DOL were acquired in 2017 by Alter Ego Media S.A.

The newspaper began publishing in 1931 under the title Αθηναϊκά Νέα (Athinaika Nea, Athens News), with the first issue being released on May 28. After the Axis occupation of Greece, it changed its name simply to "Ta Nea".

Ta Nea has been Greek's best-selling newspaper for decades, although the internet and the financial crisis have affected its circulation. The circulation peaked at around 200,000 copies in the 1990s, but by 2008, circulation had declined by more than half of its peak. It is a traditional center-left friendly newspaper, in the 1980s and 1990s strongly supporting the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK). Since 2017, it has adopted more centrist and right-wing views. Some of its prominent columnists include Yannis Pretenderis, Pavlos Tsimas and Stavros Theodorakis.

Ta Nea is also the name of a related Greek Australian newspaper produced in Melbourne by Greek Media Group.