(gettext.info)Rare Language Codes


Prev: Usual Language Codes Up: Language Codes
Enter node , (file) or (file)node

A.2 Rare Language Codes
=======================

   For rarely used languages, the ISO 639-2 standard defines
three-letter codes.  Here is the current list, reduced to only living
languages with at least one million of speakers.

‘ace’
     Achinese.
‘awa’
     Awadhi.
‘bal’
     Baluchi.
‘ban’
     Balinese.
‘bej’
     Beja; Bedawiyet.
‘bem’
     Bemba.
‘bho’
     Bhojpuri.
‘bik’
     Bikol.
‘bin’
     Bini; Edo.
‘bug’
     Buginese.
‘ceb’
     Cebuano.
‘din’
     Dinka.
‘doi’
     Dogri.
‘fil’
     Filipino; Pilipino.
‘fon’
     Fon.
‘gon’
     Gondi.
‘gsw’
     Swiss German; Alemannic; Alsatian.
‘hil’
     Hiligaynon.
‘hmn’
     Hmong.
‘ilo’
     Iloko.
‘kab’
     Kabyle.
‘kam’
     Kamba.
‘kbd’
     Kabardian.
‘kmb’
     Kimbundu.
‘kok’
     Konkani.
‘kru’
     Kurukh.
‘lua’
     Luba-Lulua.
‘luo’
     Luo (Kenya and Tanzania).
‘mad’
     Madurese.
‘mag’
     Magahi.
‘mai’
     Maithili.
‘mak’
     Makasar.
‘man’
     Mandingo.
‘men’
     Mende.
‘min’
     Minangkabau.
‘mni’
     Manipuri.
‘mos’
     Mossi.
‘mwr’
     Marwari.
‘nap’
     Neapolitan.
‘nso’
     Pedi; Sepedi; Northern Sotho.
‘nym’
     Nyamwezi.
‘nyn’
     Nyankole.
‘pag’
     Pangasinan.
‘pam’
     Pampanga; Kapampangan.
‘raj’
     Rajasthani.
‘sas’
     Sasak.
‘sat’
     Santali.
‘scn’
     Sicilian.
‘shn’
     Shan.
‘sid’
     Sidamo.
‘srr’
     Serer.
‘suk’
     Sukuma.
‘sus’
     Susu.
‘tem’
     Timne.
‘tiv’
     Tiv.
‘tum’
     Tumbuka.
‘umb’
     Umbundu.
‘wal’
     Walamo.
‘war’
     Waray.
‘yao’
     Yao.


automatically generated by info2www version 1.2.2.9