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  1. Finnish ( endonym: suomi [ˈsuo̯mi] ⓘ or suomen kieli [ˈsuo̯meŋ ˈkie̯li]) is a Finnic language of the Uralic language family, spoken by the majority of the population in Finland and by ethnic Finns outside of Finland. Finnish is one of the two official languages of Finland, alongside Swedish.

  2. Albanian (endonym: shqip ⓘ, gjuha shqipe [ˈɟuha ˈʃcipɛ], or arbërisht [aɾbəˈɾiʃt]) is an Indo-European language and the only surviving representative of the Albanoid branch, which belongs to the Paleo-Balkan group.

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    On 24 May 1955, the first public television broadcast in Finland was aired by the Radioinsinööriseura[fi] (later Elektroniikkainsinöörien seura[fi]). The project eventually developed into TES-TV (later Tesvisio), the first television channel in Finland that began regular broadcasts on 21 March 1956. The public broadcaster Yleisradio began their tel...

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    1. Bosch 2. Broadchurch 3. CSI: Crime Scene Investigation 4. CSI: Miami 5. CSI: NY 6. Crisis 7. Emmerdale 8. Hostages 9. Legends 10. Madam Secretary 11. Major Crimes 12. NCIS: New Orleans 13. Prison Break 14. Survivor 15. The Amazing Race 16. The Apprentice 17. The Bold and the Beautiful 18. The Closer 19. The Mentalist 20. The Night Manager 21. Wallander 22. 24

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    1. Army Wives 2. The Biggest Loser: Toinen mahdollisuus 3. Chicago Fire 4. Bates Motel 5. Bones 6. Kallista kipua 7. Sex and the City – Sinkkuelämää 8. Chance 9. West Wing 10. Revolution 11. C.S.I. 12. Num3rot 13. Gossip Girl 14. Kuuntelija 15. Nurse Jackie 16. Smash 17. Dexter 18. Nuoret poliisit 19. Yli synkän virran 20. Burn Notice 21. The Real Housewives franchise 22. Rikoksista pahin 23. Wild at Heart 24. Medium 25. Psych 26. Shattered 27. Ruma Betty 28. Kova laki: Erikoisyksikkö 29. Kov...

    Digital terrestrial television was launched on 21 August 2001. The analogue networks continued its broadcasts alongside the digital ones until 1 September 2007, when they were shut down nationwide. Before the analogue switchoff, the terrestrial network had three multiplexes: MUX A, MUX B and MUX C. MUX A contained the channels of the public broadca...

    Analogue cable television were switched off in Finland on 1 March 2008, but digital cable television is widespread all over the country and its infrastructure used for cable internet services.[citation needed] The major cable operators are DNA, Welho and TTV, operating in Turku, Helsinki and Tampere areas. All pay television uses digital broadcasts...

    Digital satellite television started in Nordic countries, and also in Finland, by Multichoice Nordic pay-TV platform during 1996. The first set-top boxes available were manufactured by Nokia and Pace. After that the service merged with Canal Digital in late 1997. Competing pay television Viasat and Yle's channel TV Finland started digital broadcast...

    All Yle channels are broadcast free-to-air and so are a few commercial ones including MTV3, Nelonen, MTV Sub, Jim, TV5, Star Channel and Kutonen. Yle channels are state owned and are funded by a ring fencedso-called "Yle tax". Most of the channels are the same throughout mainland Finland. In Ostrobothnia and Åland there is an extra multiplex availa...

  3. Finnish Writing system: Latin alphabet (Finnish variant) Official status; Official language in: Finland European Union recognised as minority language in: Sweden [1] Republic of Karelia [2] Regulated by: Language Planning Department of the Research Institute for the Languages of Finland: Language codes; ISO 639-1: fi: ISO 639-2: fin: ISO 639-3: fin

  4. Finnish language started to gain its role during the Grand Duchy of Finland, along with the nationalistic Fennoman movement, and obtained its official status in the Finnish Diet of 1863. It enjoys the status of an official minority language in Sweden.

  5. The two main official languages of Finland are Finnish and Swedish. There are also several official minority languages: three variants of Sami, as well as Romani, Finnish Sign Language, Finland-Swedish Sign Language and Karelian.

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  7. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Finnish language. Wikiversity has learning resources about Finnish language.

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