Portugal (Norwegian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Portugal" in Norwegian language version.

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bbc.com

bevoelkerungsstatistik.de

cia.gov

  • «Portugal». The World Factbook. CIA. 24. mars 2010. Arkivert fra originalen 19. mai 2020. Besøkt 5. april 2010. 

cnbc.com

denstoredanske.dk

economist.com

  • «Amalia Rodrigues». The Economist. 14. oktober 1999. ISSN 0013-0613. Besøkt 18. februar 2017. «Amalia Rodrigues died last week, the government of Portugal declared three days of national morning. Political activity in the country's general election campaign came to a halt. The president was the chief mourner at the singer's state funeral. It was a singular expression of national grief and in some ways a peculiar one.» 

ejc.net

ft.com

ftalphaville.ft.com

ft.com

  • «Moody’s lifts Portugal out of junk territory». Financial Times (engelsk). 12. oktober 2018. Besøkt 18. januar 2019. «Portugal’s government debt-to-GDP ratio slipped by 4.5 percentage points to 124.7 per cent of GDP in 2017, driven by strong economic growth and “healthy primary surplus”. Moody’s estimates the ratio will slip further to 116 per cent of GDP by 2021» 

ine.pt

ine.pt

censos.ine.pt

jewishvirtuallibrary.org

lemonde.fr

loc.gov

lcweb2.loc.gov

nb.no

urn.nb.no

nytimes.com

pordata.pt

snl.no

theguardian.com

unesco.org

ich.unesco.org

  • «UNESCO - Cante Alentejano, polyphonic singing from Alentejo, southern Portugal». ich.unesco.org (engelsk). Besøkt 14. januar 2019. «Cante Alentejano is a genre of traditional two-part singing performed by amateur choral groups in southern Portugal, characterized by distinctive melodies, lyrics and vocal styles, and performed without instrumentation. Groups consist of up to thirty singers divided into groups.» 
  • «UNESCO - Fado, urban popular song of Portugal». ich.unesco.org (engelsk). Besøkt 14. januar 2019. «It represents a Portuguese multicultural synthesis of Afro-Brazilian sung dances, local traditional genres of song and dance, musical traditions from rural areas of the country brought by successive waves of internal immigration, and the cosmopolitan urban song patterns of the early nineteenth century. Fado songs are usually performed by a solo singer, male or female, traditionally accompanied by a wire-strung acoustic guitar and the Portuguese guitarra – a pear-shaped cittern with twelve wire strings, unique to Portugal, which also has an extensive solo repertoire.» 

unl.pt

gdeh.fct.unl.pt

web.archive.org

webcitation.org

worldcat.org