From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Siā-lūn (Bíkok kiò-tsò "editorial", tsú-iàu kuan-tiám ê bûn-tsiuñ; hi̍k-tsiá teh Ingkok kiò-tsò "leader") sī-iû pò-tsuá, tsa̍p-tsì hi̍k-tsiá jīm-hô kî-thañ su-bīn bûn-kiāñ ê ko-kip pian-tsip jîn-uân hi̍k tshut-pán-siong tsuān-siá ê bûn-tsiuñ, thong-siông bī sú-miâ. Au-tsiu kah Bí-kok ê tsú-iàu pò-tsuá, pí-jū "New York sî-pò" (The New York Times)[1] hām "Boston khuân-kiû sî-pò" (The Boston Globe )[2], tsia-ê pò-tsuá tiāñ-tiāñ kā siā-lūn kui-luī tsò "Ì-kiàn" ê piau-tê.
Tshah-tôo siā-lūn khó-lîng iōng siā-lūn bàng-gah ê hîng-sik tshut-hiān.[3] Teh thong-siông ê tsîng-hóng tsi-hā, pò-tsuá ê pen-tsip uí-uân-huē ē phîng-kóo tah-tsi̍t-kuá tuì in-ê to̍k-tsiá liáu-kái pò-tsuá ê ì-kiàn tsiâñ-tiōng-iàu.[4]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.