12-519: Not to be confused with Nowiki . [REDACTED] Look up Nowicki in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Nowicki ( Polish pronunciation: [nɔˈvit͡ski] ; feminine: Nowicka ; plural: Nowiccy ) is a Polish and Jewish surname. It comes from place names such as Nowice , which are derived from the Polish adjective nowy ("new"). As a Jewish surname it
24-683: Is nn , and the Nynorsk Misplaced Pages is hosted at nn.wikipedia.org . On 9 April 2013, the Nynorsk Misplaced Pages passed 100,000 articles. Wikimedia Norge is a Norwegian private membership association with the purpose to support Wikimedia's projects, in particular those in Norwegian and Sami languages . The association was formed at a meeting at the National Library in Oslo on 23 June 2007. However, it has no formal role in relation to
36-3314: Is derived from the Hebrew word "nevuchim" (נבוכים) which refers to members of the Levite tribe . This name is commonly found among Jews in Poland, Belarus, and Ukraine. The surname is somewhat more frequent in central Poland. It has many forms in other languages. Language Masculine Feminine Polish Nowicki Nowicka Belarusian ( Romanization ) Навіцкі (Navicki, Navitski) Навіцкая (Navickaja, Navitskaya, Navitskaia) Czech , Slovak Novický Novická Hungarian Noviczky Noviczkyné Latvian Novickis Novicka Lithuanian Navickas , Navickis Novickas, Novickis Navickienė (married), Navickaitė, Navickytė (unmarried) Novickienė (married), Novickaitė, Novickytė (unmarried) Romanian/Moldovan Novițchi Russian ( Romanization ) Новицкий (Novitskiy, Novitskii, Novickij, Novitsky , Novitski ) Новицкая (Novitskaya, Novitskaia, Novickaja) Ukrainian ( Romanization ) Новицький (Novitskyi, Novitskyy, Novitsky , Novickyj) Новицька (Novitska, Novicka) Other Nowitzki , Nowitzky , Nowizki, Novicki People [ edit ] Nowicki [ edit ] Andrzej Nowicki (disambiguation) , multiple people Bartosz Nowicki (born 1984), Polish athlete Dolores Ashcroft-Nowicki (born 1929), British occult author Franciszek Nowicki (1864–1935), Polish poet and socialist activist Henryk Nowicki (1902–1969), known as Jerzy Zawieyski , Polish writer and activist Jan Nowicki (1939–2022), Polish actor Janet Nowicki (born 1953), American figure skater Jerzy Nowicki (1933–2013), Polish sport shooter Maciej Nowicki (born 1941), Polish politician Matthew Nowicki (1910–1950), Polish architect Maksymilian Nowicki (1826–1890), Polish zoologist Mieczysław Nowicki (born 1951), Polish road bicycle racer Tadeusz Nowicki (tennis) (born 1946), Polish tennis player Wojciech Nowicki (born 1989), Polish athlete Nowicka [ edit ] Danuta Nowicka (born 1951), Polish politician Joanna Nowicka (born 1966), Polish archer Julia Nowicka (born 1998), Polish volleyball player Katarzyna Nowicka (born 1974), known as Novika , Polish vocalist Patrycja Nowicka (born 1998), Polish vocalist Stanisława Nowicka (1905–1990), Polish dancer Wanda Nowicka (born 1956), Polish politician and activist See also [ edit ] All pages with titles containing Nowicki All pages with titles containing Nowicka References [ edit ] ^ Guggenheimer, Heinrich Walter (1992). Jewish Family Names and Their Origins: An Etymological Dictionary . United States of America: Ktav Publishing House, Inc. p. 554. ISBN 0-88125-297-2 . ^ "Nowicki" . ancestry.com . ^ "Surname Nowicki - Meaning and Origin" . iGenea . ^ "Nowicki" . moikrewni.pl . ^ "Nowicka" . moikrewni.pl . [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with
48-695: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Nowiki There are two Norwegian language editions of Misplaced Pages : one for articles written in Bokmål or Riksmål , and one for articles written in Nynorsk or Høgnorsk . There are currently 639,119 articles on the Norwegian Misplaced Pages edition in Bokmål/Riksmål, and 172,334 articles on the Nynorsk edition. The first site,
60-823: The Finnish Misplaced Pages surpassed it in April 2006 it was once again the 14th largest Misplaced Pages by article count. However, in September 2007, the Bokmål/Riksmål Misplaced Pages surpassed the Finnish, and has since then been the 13th largest Misplaced Pages. As of 1 June 2010, the Bokmål/Riksmål contains more than 260,000 articles, while the Nynorsk version contains over 57,000. Norwegian, Danish, and Swedish are mutually intelligible languages and can be understood by most speakers of each. The sites collaborate with
72-613: The surname Nowicki . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name (s) to the link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nowicki&oldid=1255580204 " Categories : Surnames Polish-language surnames Toponymic surnames Hidden categories: Articles containing Belarusian-language text Articles containing Russian-language text Articles containing Ukrainian-language text Articles with short description Short description
84-455: The 150,000th article was created in the Bokmål section on January 30 of the same year. The number of registered contributors to the Nynorsk Misplaced Pages by that time had reached 3,377. The contributors to the Nynorsk Misplaced Pages used Apertium to perform machine translation between Nynorsk and Bokmål, and also collaborated with Misplaced Pages sections in other continental Scandinavian languages as part of
96-453: The Norwegian Misplaced Pages projects. The Norwegian Misplaced Pages was launched on 29 November 2001, and initially there were no precise rules governing the writing of articles in a particular dialect. The development of the section led to the decision to launch a separate section in Nynorsk, which happened on 31 July 2004. On 7 August 2005, the 10,000th article was written (Edvard Langset). In April 2007, Noregs Mållag , an organization dedicated to
108-602: The original Norwegian Misplaced Pages ( Norsk Misplaced Pages ), launched on 26 November 2001, and originally did not specify which written standard could/should be used, although de facto almost all the articles were written in Bokmål/Riksmål. The Norwegian Misplaced Pages originally had the address no.wikipedia.com , but in August 2002 all Misplaced Pages editions moved from the wikipedia.com domain to the wikipedia.org domain, shortly after Jimbo Wales had announced that Misplaced Pages would never have commercial advertisements. A Nynorsk-specific Misplaced Pages
120-726: The other Scandinavian Wikipedias through the Skanwiki section of the Wikimedia Foundation 's Meta-Wiki site. One effect of this combined effort is the sharing of their weekly featured front-page articles among these four different Wikipedias. While the ISO 639 two-letter code for Bokmål is nb , the Bokmål/Riksmål Norwegian Misplaced Pages continues to be hosted at no.wikipedia.org , while the narrower nb code redirects to that site. The Nynorsk code
132-425: The promotion of Nynorsk, donated 50,000 Norwegian kroner to the administrator and bureaucrat of the section Ranveig Mossige Thattai for the development of the Nynorsk section. On 11 August 2007 the number of articles exceeded 25,000 (the anniversary was Fallots tetrade). The number of registered participants by that time had reached almost 3,000. On 13 February 2008 the number of articles exceeded 30,000, while
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#1732788023012144-428: Was launched on 31 July 2004, and grew quickly. Following a vote in 2005, the main Norwegian site became Bokmål and Riksmål only. By February 2007, the Bokmål/Riksmål edition had over 100,000 articles and the Nynorsk site had over 20,000 articles. In February 2006, the Bokmål/Riksmål edition became the thirteenth Misplaced Pages to have more than 50,000 articles, and one year later it was the fourteenth to reach 100,000. After
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