RRI 2

Last updated

RRI 2 stands for Radio Romania International. It offers correct, impartial, quick, relevant, and understandable information and analysis about Romania and its citizens, about its geographical area, to listeners from other countries, with extremely different language, education, age and life experience.

Contents

Structure

Related Research Articles

Romanian language Eastern Romance language

Romanian is an Eastern Romance language spoken by approximately 22–26 million people as a native language, primarily in Romania and Moldova, and by another 4 million people as a second language. According to another estimate, there are about 34 million people worldwide who can speak Romanian, of whom 30 million speak it as a native language. It is an official and national language of both Romania and Moldova and is one of the official languages of the European Union.

GenOn Energy Defunct American corporation

GenOn Energy, Inc., based in Houston, Texas, United States, was an energy company that provided electricity to wholesale customers in the United States. The company was one of the largest independent power producers in the nation with more than 14,000 megawatts of power generation capacity across the United States using natural gas, fuel oil and coal. GenOn Energy is headquartered in the Reliant Energy Plaza in Downtown Houston. The company, formerly known as RRI Energy, acquired Mirant on December 3, 2010. The corporate names and logos of both RRI Energy and Mirant were retired.

Radio Republik Indonesia Indonesian public radio network

Radio Republik Indonesia, legally Lembaga Penyiaran Publik (LPP) Radio Republik Indonesia is a public radio network of Indonesia. Founded on 11 September 1945, it is the first radio network in Indonesia. RRI headquarters are located on Medan Merdeka Barat Street in Central Jakarta.

RRI 1 is a Romanian language news radio station.

Radio Romania International International broadcasting service of Romania

Radio România Internaţional is a Romanian radio station owned by the Romanian public radio broadcaster Societatea Română de Radiodifuziune that broadcasts abroad. Prior to 1989, the station was known as Radio Bucharest.

Raman Research Institute

Raman Research Institute (RRI) is an institute of scientific research located in Bangalore, India. It was founded by Nobel laureate C. V. Raman. Although it began as an institute privately owned by Sir C. V. Raman, it is now funded by the government of India.

Radio Prague International is the official international broadcasting station of the Czech Republic. Broadcasting first began on August 31, 1936 near the spa town of Poděbrady. Radio Prague broadcasts in six languages: English, German, French, Spanish, Czech and Russian. It broadcasts programmes about the Czech Republic on satellite and on the Internet.

Romanian Radio Broadcasting Company

The Romanian Radio Broadcasting Company, informally referred to as Radio Romania, is the public radio broadcaster in Romania. It operates FM and AM, and internet national and local radio channels. The local stations are branded under the Radio România Regional umbrella.

BBC Romanian was the Romanian branch of the BBC World Service (Radio) for Romania and Moldova. Since 2004, it broadcast on its own frequency ; until then its signal was re-broadcast by local radio stations, partners of BBC Romanian.

Romanian language in Serbia Status of the Romanian language in Serbia

The Romanian language is widely spoken in Serbia. This country hosts large native Romanian-speaking populations, which can be divided into the ethnic Romanians in the autonomous region of Vojvodina and the Vlachs of the Timok Valley, a geographical region in Central Serbia. The former speak the Banat Romanian dialect, identify as Romanians and have full rights within the autonomous region. In fact, Romanian is one of the six officially recognized languages of Vojvodina. On the other hand, the Vlachs speak archaic varieties of the Banat and Oltenian dialects, but they do not identify as Romanians and their language is also not recognized as Romanian within Serbia. A "Vlach language" has gone under attempted standardization in the country, which would go along with a Cyrillic alphabet for the Vlachs. This has been criticized in Romania, and attempts to bring Romanian-language resources and education to the Timok Vlachs have been blocked by the Serbian authorities.

Outline of Romania Overview of and topical guide to Romania

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Romania:

Voice of Indonesia International broadcasting service of Indonesia

RRI World Service, Voice of Indonesia is an autonomous division under Radio Republik Indonesia (RRI), an Indonesian public radio service. It is a national radio station that broadcasts all over Indonesia and abroad to serve all Indonesia citizens anywhere in the country and abroad. RRI also provides information about Indonesia to people around the world. Voice of Indonesia is the division for abroad broadcasting. As an autonomous division, VOI has its own independent structure so it can find their own financial resources through marketing.

Danube Second-longest river in Europe

The Danube is the second-longest river in Europe, after the Volga in Russia. It flows through much of Central and Southeastern Europe, from the Black Forest into the Black Sea. Its longest headstream Breg rises in Furtwangen im Schwarzwald, while the river carries its name from its source confluence in Donaueschingen onwards.

Vasile Gafencu

Vasile Gafencu was a Bessarabian politician.

<i>Beautiful Strangers</i> Book by Mircea Cărtărescu

Beautiful Strangers is a 2010 prose collection by the Romanian writer Mircea Cărtărescu. It consists of stories Cărtărescu wrote for the magazine Seven Nights. Cărtărescu groups it with his earlier books The Encyclopedia of Dragons and Why We Love Women as a trilogy of prose with lower literary ambition. Beautiful Strangers was the ninth best-selling book overall in Romania in 2010.

<i>The Encyclopedia of Dragons</i>

The Encyclopedia of Dragons is a 2002 book by the Romanian writer Mircea Cărtărescu, with illustrations by Tudor Banus. It focuses on dragons in Romanian folklore, and includes ten short stories about dragons. Cărtărescu groups it with his books Why We Love Women and Beautiful Strangers as a trilogy of prose with lower literary ambition.

Avinash Anant Deshpande is an Indian astrophysicist and a professor of physics at Raman Research Institute. Known for his research on astrophysics, desh is known to have contributed towards the studies of the pulsar magnetospheric emission regions and in the elucidation of unphysically ultradense neutral hydrogen irregularities in the interstellar space.

Public broadcasting institutions in Indonesia currently consists of three separate entities: Radio Republik Indonesia (RRI), Televisi Republik Indonesia (TVRI), and local public broadcasting institutions. This classification is based on Act No. 32 of 2002 on Broadcasting and followed by Government Regulation No. 11 of 2005 on Broadcasting Provision of Public Broadcasting Institution.

Alexander Nanau is an Oscar® nominated Romanian film director, film producer and screenwriter.

References