Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Comisia Europeană" in Romanian language version.
|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)Informally, the appointed members of the Commission are known as 'commissioners'.
A new team of 27 Commissioners (one from each EU country) is appointed every five years.
The Commission is divided into several departments and services. The departments are known as Directorates-General (DGs).
23 000 staff members work in the Commission in departments, known as directorates-general (DGs) or services, each responsible for a particular policy area and headed by a Director-General, who reports directly to the President.
The European Union has 24 official and working languages ... The European Commission employs English, French and German in general as procedural languages ...
|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)Informally, the appointed members of the Commission are known as 'commissioners'.
A new team of 27 Commissioners (one from each EU country) is appointed every five years.
The Commission is divided into several departments and services. The departments are known as Directorates-General (DGs).
23 000 staff members work in the Commission in departments, known as directorates-general (DGs) or services, each responsible for a particular policy area and headed by a Director-General, who reports directly to the President.
|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)|accesat=
ignorat (posibil, |access-date=
?) (ajutor)