This page will contain blogs about dagbladet, as they become available.

Dagbladet

Dagbladet is Norway's third largest newspaper with a circulation of 191,164 copies in 2002. The newspaper was founded in 1869, and its format was changed to tabloid in 1983. The word "Dagbladet" literally means "The daily paper".

Dagbladet is published seven days a week, and includes an additional feature magazine, Magasinet, every Saturday.

For a number of years Dagbladet has had a leading role within development of new editorial products in Norway. In 1990, the newspaper was the first in Norway to publish a Sunday edition in more than 70 years, and it was also the first of the major Norwegian newspapers with its own Internet web site in 1995. Over the past few years Dagbladet has had success with Magasinet as part of the Saturday edition. The magazine has a reader coverage of approximately 26% of the adult population of Norway.

Dagbladet also runs one of Norway's largest websites, being slightly smaller than its main rival, Verdens Gang. The paper went online 8 March 1995, and is the oldest one still alive in Norway. By October 2005 it had 1.27 million weekly unique visitors and 83.3 million weekly page impressions [1]. The online edition is owned by the company DB Medialab AS, who also owns half of the Norwegian internet portal site and ISP start.no.

See also: List of Norwegian newspapers


This page about dagbladet includes information from a Wikipedia article.
Additional articles about dagbladet
News stories about dagbladet
External links for dagbladet
Videos for dagbladet
Wikis about dagbladet
Discussion Groups about dagbladet
Blogs about dagbladet
Images of dagbladet

See also: List of Norwegian newspapers.
. The online edition is owned by the company DB Medialab AS, who also owns half of the Norwegian internet portal site and ISP start.no. Chinese lyrics (詞) are Chinese poems written in the set metrical and tonal pattern of a particular song. By October 2005 it had 1.27 million weekly unique visitors and 83.3 million weekly page impressions [1]. Analysis based on tonality and contrast are particular examples. The paper went online 8 March 1995, and is the oldest one still alive in Norway. Lyrics can also be analyzed with respect to the sense of unity (or lack of unity) it has with its supporting music.

Dagbladet also runs one of Norway's largest websites, being slightly smaller than its main rival, Verdens Gang. Lyrics often contain political, social and economic themes as well as aesthetic elements, and so can connote messages which are culturally significant. The magazine has a reader coverage of approximately 26% of the adult population of Norway. For example, some lyrics can be considered a form of social commentary. Over the past few years Dagbladet has had success with Magasinet as part of the Saturday edition. Lyrics can be studied from an academic perspective. In 1990, the newspaper was the first in Norway to publish a Sunday edition in more than 70 years, and it was also the first of the major Norwegian newspapers with its own Internet web site in 1995. Use of the singular form lyric is still grammatically acceptable; it is still considered erroneous to refer to an individual word in a song as a lyric.

For a number of years Dagbladet has had a leading role within development of new editorial products in Norway. Even so, such usage became increasingly common (probably because of the association between lyrics and the plural form words), and is predominant in modern usage. Dagbladet is published seven days a week, and includes an additional feature magazine, Magasinet, every Saturday. The plural lyrics was used only in referring to the words of multiple songs; to refer to the words of a single song as its lyrics instead of its lyric was considered erroneous. The word "Dagbladet" literally means "The daily paper". The word lyric came to be used for the "words of a popular song"; this meaning was recorded in 1876 [1]. The newspaper was founded in 1869, and its format was changed to tabloid in 1983. A lyric poem is one that expresses a subjective, personal point of view.

Dagbladet is Norway's third largest newspaper with a circulation of 191,164 copies in 2002. From the Greek, a lyric was originally a song sung with a lyre. There are many websites that feature lyrics to songs. In such cases, there is a tendency to emphasize the form, articulation, meter, and symmetries of the expressions. Some lyrics are so abstract as to be completely unintelligible.

The meaning conveyed in lyrical verses can be explicit or implicit. Sometimes, however, music is adapted to or written for a song or poem that has already been written. Lyrics can be written as the accompanying music is composed, or added afterwards. Lyrics are the words in songs.