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- ISO_639_macrolanguage abstract "ISO 639-3 is an international standard for language codes. In defining some of its language codes, some are defined as macrolanguages covering either borderline cases between strongly divergent dialects and very closely related languages (dialect continuums), or speech varieties that are considered to be either the same or different languages for ethnic or political rather than linguistic reasons. There are fifty-six languages in ISO 639-2 that are considered to be macrolanguages in ISO 639-3. The use of this category of macrolanguage has been applied in the Ethnologue 16th edition.Some of the macrolanguages had no individual language as defined by 639-3 in ISO 639-2, e.g. 'ara' (Arabic). Others like 'nor' (Norwegian) had their two individual parts (nno Nynorsk, nob Bokmål) already in 639-2. That means some languages (e.g. 'arb' Standard Arabic) that were considered by ISO 639-2 to be dialects of one language ('ara') are now in ISO 639-3 in certain contexts considered to be individual languages themselves. This is an attempt to deal with varieties that may be linguistically distinct from each other, but are treated by their speakers as forms of the same language, e.g. in cases of diglossia. For example,Generic Arabic, 639-2 Standard Arabic, 639-3".
- ISO_639_macrolanguage wikiPageExternalLink iso639-3..
- ISO_639_macrolanguage wikiPageExternalLink macrolanguages.asp.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage wikiPageID "5575456".
- ISO_639_macrolanguage wikiPageRevisionID "604797809".
- ISO_639_macrolanguage hasPhotoCollection ISO_639_macrolanguage.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage subject Category:Dialectology.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage subject Category:ISO_639.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage subject Category:Language_versus_dialect.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage subject Category:Languages.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage comment "ISO 639-3 is an international standard for language codes. In defining some of its language codes, some are defined as macrolanguages covering either borderline cases between strongly divergent dialects and very closely related languages (dialect continuums), or speech varieties that are considered to be either the same or different languages for ethnic or political rather than linguistic reasons. There are fifty-six languages in ISO 639-2 that are considered to be macrolanguages in ISO 639-3.".
- ISO_639_macrolanguage label "ISO 639 macrolanguage".
- ISO_639_macrolanguage label "Macro-langue".
- ISO_639_macrolanguage label "Macrolengua".
- ISO_639_macrolanguage label "Macrotaal".
- ISO_639_macrolanguage label "Makrojęzyk".
- ISO_639_macrolanguage label "Makrosprache (ISO 639)".
- ISO_639_macrolanguage sameAs Makrosprache_(ISO_639).
- ISO_639_macrolanguage sameAs Macrolengua.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage sameAs Macro-langue.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage sameAs Macrotaal.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage sameAs Makrojęzyk.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage sameAs m.0dtbkr.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage sameAs Q152559.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage sameAs Q152559.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage wasDerivedFrom ISO_639_macrolanguage?oldid=604797809.
- ISO_639_macrolanguage isPrimaryTopicOf ISO_639_macrolanguage.