Austrian$5971$ - definição. O que é Austrian$5971$. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é Austrian$5971$ - definição

AMERICANS OF AUSTRIAN ANCESTRY
List of Austrian Americans; Austrian-Americans; Austrian-American; Austrian American; Austrian–American; History of Austrian Americans

Austrian School         
  • [[Eugen Böhm von Bawerk]]
  • [[Friedrich von Wieser]]
  • Campus of [[Mises Institute]], in [[Auburn, Alabama]]
  • [[Carl Menger]]
  • [[Friedrich Hayek]]
  • [[Israel Kirzner]]
  • [[Jean-Baptiste Say]]. The [[French Liberal School]] of Political Economy is an intellectual ancestor of Austrian School of Economics.
  • [[Ludwig von Mises]]
SCHOOL OF ECONOMIC THOUGHT THAT ADVOCATES STRICT ADHERENCE TO METHODOLOGICAL INDIVIDUALISM RATHER THAN FOCUSING ON AGGREGATE VARIABLES, EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS AND SOCIETAL GROUPS
Austrian economics; Austrian school; Austrian Economics; Austrian economists; Austrian economist; Austrian School of Economics; Austrian Economists; Austrian Economist; Austrianism; Austrianist; Austro-libertarian; Austro-libertarianism; Austrian School of economics; Austrian economic school; Newtonian time in economics; Austrian School Of Economics; Vienna School Of Economics; Criticisms of Austrian School; Austrian Economic; Austrian School
The Austrian School is a heterodox school of economic thought that advocates strict adherence to methodological individualism, the concept that social phenomena result exclusively from the motivations and actions of individuals. Austrian school theorists hold that economic theory should be exclusively derived from basic principles of human action.
Austrian literature         
  • Adalbert Stifter
  • Elfriede Jelinek
  • Georg Trakl
  • Writer Thomas Glavinic at the HeadRead festival (2012).
  • Franz Kafka
  • Writer Michael Köhlmeier reading in Olmütz (2009).
  • Christoph Ransmayr (Foto: Johannes Cizek)
  • Heinrich von dem Tuerlîn: Diu Crône. Heidelberg, UB, cpg 374, 1r.
  • Writer Wolf Haas reading at the literary festival o-töne in Vienna (2009).
LITERATURE WRITTEN IN AUSTRIA
Austrian Literature; Literature of Austria; Austrian poetry
Austrian literature () is mostly written in German, and is closely connected with German literature.
Austrian German         
  • Fußgänger}} in Germany. In all-caps words, [[capital ẞ]] (instead of ''SS'') became standard in both nations in 2017, but ''SS'' remains valid.
  • Schulschrift}} (1995), an Austrian primary-school handwriting style
VARIETY OF STANDARD GERMAN WRITTEN AND SPOKEN IN AUSTRIA AND NORTH ITALY
AustriaLanguage; Austria/Language; Austrian Dialect; Austrian-German; Austrian accent; Österreichisches Deutsch; Austrian Standard German; Austrian German language; Austrian Language; Standard Austrian German; Österreichisches Standarddeutsch; Austrian High German; Österreichisches Hochdeutsch; De-at; ISO 639:de-AT

Austrian German (German: Österreichisches Deutsch), Austrian Standard German (ASG), Standard Austrian German (Österreichisches Standarddeutsch), or Austrian High German (Österreichisches Hochdeutsch), is the variety of Standard German written and spoken in Austria. It has the highest sociolinguistic prestige locally, as it is the variation used in the media and for other formal situations. In less formal situations, Austrians use Bavarian and Alemannic dialects, which are traditionally spoken but rarely written in Austria.

Wikipédia

Austrian Americans

Austrian Americans (German: Österreichamerikaner, pronounced [ˈøːstɐʁaɪçʔameʁiˌkaːnɐ]) are Americans of Austrian descent, chiefly German-speaking Catholics and Jews. According to the 2000 U.S. census, there were 735,128 Americans of full or partial Austrian descent, accounting for 0.3% of the population. The states with the largest Austrian American populations are New York (93,083), California (84,959), Pennsylvania (58,002) (most of them in the Lehigh Valley), Florida (54,214), New Jersey (45,154), and Ohio (27,017).

This may be an undercount since many German Americans, Czech Americans, Polish Americans, Slovak Americans, and Ukrainian Americans, and other Americans with Central European ancestry can trace their roots from the Habsburg territories of Austria, the Austrian Empire, or Cisleithania in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, regions which were major sources of immigrants to the United States before World War I, and whose inhabitants often assimilated into larger immigrant and ethnic communities throughout the United States.