-
Ferenc Kazinczy (Hungarian: [ˈkɒzintsi ˈfɛrɛnt͡s]), (in
older English:
Francis Kazinczy,
October 27, 1759 –
August 23, 1831) was a
Hungarian author, poet...
-
community center.
Movie showings, live
music performances, an art gallery, the
Kazinczy Living Library, the
Szimpla Farmers' Market, and the
Szimpla Bringa bicycle...
- The
Miskolc Synagogue, also
called the
Kazinczy Street Synagogue or the
Great Synagogue of Miskolc, is an
Orthodox Jewish congregation and synagogue, located...
- The
Kazinczy Street Synagogue (Hungarian:
Kazinczy utcai zsinagóga),
variously called the Sasz-Chevra
Synagogue and the
Great Orthodox Synagogue is an...
-
actively used
today (see also
Ferenc Kazinczy, the
leading figure of the
Hungarian language reforms.)
Kazinczy's chief goal was to
replace existing words...
- Ábel
Zsendovits and his
friends turned a
condemned building complex on
Kazinczy Street into a ruin bar. It
started as an
experimental bar with affordable...
-
Kazinczy legacy and in the
establishment of the
Kazinczy cult. The Rákóczi
Masonic Lodge,
founded in 1881,
supported the
preservation of
Kazinczy's house...
- the Bodrogköz
Castle Museum of Pácin, the
Ferenc Kazinczy Museum of Sátoraljaújhely, the
Ferenc Kazinczy Memorial Hall in Széphalom, the
Gallery of Sárospatak...
- Science,
Faculty of
Social Sciences,
Faculty of Informatics)
Buildings in
Kazinczy utca (7th district) and
Izabella utca (6th district) (Faculty of Education...
- Berzsenyi. The most
prominent figure of
Hungarian language reform was
Ferenc Kazinczy, who
helped make the
Hungarian language a
useful tool for
scientific theorization;...