Current Path : /usr/local/share/doc/gettext/ |
FreeBSD hs32.drive.ne.jp 9.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 9.1-RELEASE #1: Wed Jan 14 12:18:08 JST 2015 root@hs32.drive.ne.jp:/sys/amd64/compile/hs32 amd64 |
Current File : //usr/local/share/doc/gettext/gettext_17.html |
<HTML> <HEAD> <!-- This HTML file has been created by texi2html 1.52b from gettext.texi on 4 November 2007 --> <META HTTP-EQUIV="content-type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=UTF-8"> <TITLE>GNU gettext utilities - A Language Codes</TITLE> </HEAD> <BODY> Go to the <A HREF="gettext_1.html">first</A>, <A HREF="gettext_16.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="gettext_18.html">next</A>, <A HREF="gettext_25.html">last</A> section, <A HREF="gettext_toc.html">table of contents</A>. <P><HR><P> <H1><A NAME="SEC315" HREF="gettext_toc.html#TOC315">A Language Codes</A></H1> <P> <A NAME="IDX1225"></A> <A NAME="IDX1226"></A> </P> <P> The ISO 639 standard defines two-letter codes for many languages, and three-letter codes for more rarely used languages. All abbreviations for languages used in the Translation Project should come from this standard. </P> <H2><A NAME="SEC316" HREF="gettext_toc.html#TOC316">A.1 Usual Language Codes</A></H2> <P> For the commonly used languages, the ISO 639-1 standard defines two-letter codes. </P> <DL COMPACT> <DT><SAMP>‘aa’</SAMP> <DD> Afar. <DT><SAMP>‘ab’</SAMP> <DD> Abkhazian. <DT><SAMP>‘ad’</SAMP> <DD> Adangme. <DT><SAMP>‘ae’</SAMP> <DD> Avestan. <DT><SAMP>‘af’</SAMP> <DD> Afrikaans. <DT><SAMP>‘ak’</SAMP> <DD> Akan. <DT><SAMP>‘am’</SAMP> <DD> Amharic. <DT><SAMP>‘an’</SAMP> <DD> Aragonese. <DT><SAMP>‘ar’</SAMP> <DD> Arabic. <DT><SAMP>‘as’</SAMP> <DD> Assamese. <DT><SAMP>‘av’</SAMP> <DD> Avaric. <DT><SAMP>‘ay’</SAMP> <DD> Aymara. <DT><SAMP>‘az’</SAMP> <DD> Azerbaijani. <DT><SAMP>‘ba’</SAMP> <DD> Bashkir. <DT><SAMP>‘be’</SAMP> <DD> Byelorussian; Belarusian. <DT><SAMP>‘bg’</SAMP> <DD> Bulgarian. <DT><SAMP>‘bh’</SAMP> <DD> Bihari. <DT><SAMP>‘bi’</SAMP> <DD> Bislama. <DT><SAMP>‘bm’</SAMP> <DD> Bambara. <DT><SAMP>‘bn’</SAMP> <DD> Bengali; Bangla. <DT><SAMP>‘bo’</SAMP> <DD> Tibetan. <DT><SAMP>‘br’</SAMP> <DD> Breton. <DT><SAMP>‘bs’</SAMP> <DD> Bosnian. <DT><SAMP>‘ca’</SAMP> <DD> Catalan. <DT><SAMP>‘ce’</SAMP> <DD> Chechen. <DT><SAMP>‘ch’</SAMP> <DD> Chamorro. <DT><SAMP>‘co’</SAMP> <DD> Corsican. <DT><SAMP>‘cr’</SAMP> <DD> Cree. <DT><SAMP>‘cs’</SAMP> <DD> Czech. <DT><SAMP>‘cu’</SAMP> <DD> Church Slavic. <DT><SAMP>‘cv’</SAMP> <DD> Chuvash. <DT><SAMP>‘cy’</SAMP> <DD> Welsh. <DT><SAMP>‘da’</SAMP> <DD> Danish. <DT><SAMP>‘de’</SAMP> <DD> German. <DT><SAMP>‘dv’</SAMP> <DD> Divehi; Maldivian. <DT><SAMP>‘dz’</SAMP> <DD> Dzongkha; Bhutani. <DT><SAMP>‘ee’</SAMP> <DD> 'Ew'e. <DT><SAMP>‘el’</SAMP> <DD> Greek. <DT><SAMP>‘en’</SAMP> <DD> English. <DT><SAMP>‘eo’</SAMP> <DD> Esperanto. <DT><SAMP>‘es’</SAMP> <DD> Spanish. <DT><SAMP>‘et’</SAMP> <DD> Estonian. <DT><SAMP>‘eu’</SAMP> <DD> Basque. <DT><SAMP>‘fa’</SAMP> <DD> Persian. <DT><SAMP>‘ff’</SAMP> <DD> Fulah. <DT><SAMP>‘fi’</SAMP> <DD> Finnish. <DT><SAMP>‘fj’</SAMP> <DD> Fijian; Fiji. <DT><SAMP>‘fo’</SAMP> <DD> Faroese. <DT><SAMP>‘fr’</SAMP> <DD> French. <DT><SAMP>‘fy’</SAMP> <DD> Western Frisian. <DT><SAMP>‘ga’</SAMP> <DD> Irish. <DT><SAMP>‘gd’</SAMP> <DD> Scots; Gaelic. <DT><SAMP>‘gl’</SAMP> <DD> Galician. <DT><SAMP>‘gn’</SAMP> <DD> Guarani. <DT><SAMP>‘gu’</SAMP> <DD> Gujarati. <DT><SAMP>‘gv’</SAMP> <DD> Manx. <DT><SAMP>‘ha’</SAMP> <DD> Hausa. <DT><SAMP>‘he’</SAMP> <DD> Hebrew (formerly iw). <DT><SAMP>‘hi’</SAMP> <DD> Hindi. <DT><SAMP>‘ho’</SAMP> <DD> Hiri Motu. <DT><SAMP>‘hr’</SAMP> <DD> Croatian. <DT><SAMP>‘ht’</SAMP> <DD> Haitian; Haitian Creole. <DT><SAMP>‘hu’</SAMP> <DD> Hungarian. <DT><SAMP>‘hy’</SAMP> <DD> Armenian. <DT><SAMP>‘hz’</SAMP> <DD> Herero. <DT><SAMP>‘ia’</SAMP> <DD> Interlingua. <DT><SAMP>‘id’</SAMP> <DD> Indonesian (formerly in). <DT><SAMP>‘ie’</SAMP> <DD> Interlingue. <DT><SAMP>‘ig’</SAMP> <DD> Igbo. <DT><SAMP>‘ii’</SAMP> <DD> Sichuan Yi. <DT><SAMP>‘ik’</SAMP> <DD> Inupiak; Inupiaq. <DT><SAMP>‘io’</SAMP> <DD> Ido. <DT><SAMP>‘is’</SAMP> <DD> Icelandic. <DT><SAMP>‘it’</SAMP> <DD> Italian. <DT><SAMP>‘iu’</SAMP> <DD> Inuktitut. <DT><SAMP>‘ja’</SAMP> <DD> Japanese. <DT><SAMP>‘jv’</SAMP> <DD> Javanese. <DT><SAMP>‘ka’</SAMP> <DD> Georgian. <DT><SAMP>‘kg’</SAMP> <DD> Kongo. <DT><SAMP>‘ki’</SAMP> <DD> Kikuyu; Gikuyu. <DT><SAMP>‘kj’</SAMP> <DD> Kuanyama; Kwanyama. <DT><SAMP>‘kk’</SAMP> <DD> Kazakh. <DT><SAMP>‘kl’</SAMP> <DD> Kalaallisut; Greenlandic. <DT><SAMP>‘km’</SAMP> <DD> Khmer; Cambodian. <DT><SAMP>‘kn’</SAMP> <DD> Kannada. <DT><SAMP>‘ko’</SAMP> <DD> Korean. <DT><SAMP>‘kr’</SAMP> <DD> Kanuri. <DT><SAMP>‘ks’</SAMP> <DD> Kashmiri. <DT><SAMP>‘ku’</SAMP> <DD> Kurdish. <DT><SAMP>‘kv’</SAMP> <DD> Komi. <DT><SAMP>‘kw’</SAMP> <DD> Cornish. <DT><SAMP>‘ky’</SAMP> <DD> Kirghiz. <DT><SAMP>‘la’</SAMP> <DD> Latin. <DT><SAMP>‘lb’</SAMP> <DD> Letzeburgesch; Luxembourgish. <DT><SAMP>‘lg’</SAMP> <DD> Ganda. <DT><SAMP>‘li’</SAMP> <DD> Limburgish; Limburger; Limburgan. <DT><SAMP>‘ln’</SAMP> <DD> Lingala. <DT><SAMP>‘lo’</SAMP> <DD> Lao; Laotian. <DT><SAMP>‘lt’</SAMP> <DD> Lithuanian. <DT><SAMP>‘lu’</SAMP> <DD> Luba-Katanga. <DT><SAMP>‘lv’</SAMP> <DD> Latvian; Lettish. <DT><SAMP>‘mg’</SAMP> <DD> Malagasy. <DT><SAMP>‘mh’</SAMP> <DD> Marshallese. <DT><SAMP>‘mi’</SAMP> <DD> Maori. <DT><SAMP>‘mk’</SAMP> <DD> Macedonian. <DT><SAMP>‘ml’</SAMP> <DD> Malayalam. <DT><SAMP>‘mn’</SAMP> <DD> Mongolian. <DT><SAMP>‘mo’</SAMP> <DD> Moldavian. <DT><SAMP>‘mr’</SAMP> <DD> Marathi. <DT><SAMP>‘ms’</SAMP> <DD> Malay. <DT><SAMP>‘mt’</SAMP> <DD> Maltese. <DT><SAMP>‘my’</SAMP> <DD> Burmese. <DT><SAMP>‘na’</SAMP> <DD> Nauru. <DT><SAMP>‘nb’</SAMP> <DD> Norwegian Bokmål. <DT><SAMP>‘nd’</SAMP> <DD> Ndebele, North. <DT><SAMP>‘ne’</SAMP> <DD> Nepali. <DT><SAMP>‘ng’</SAMP> <DD> Ndonga. <DT><SAMP>‘nl’</SAMP> <DD> Dutch. <DT><SAMP>‘nn’</SAMP> <DD> Norwegian Nynorsk. <DT><SAMP>‘no’</SAMP> <DD> Norwegian. <DT><SAMP>‘nr’</SAMP> <DD> Ndebele, South. <DT><SAMP>‘nv’</SAMP> <DD> Navajo; Navaho. <DT><SAMP>‘ny’</SAMP> <DD> Chichewa; Nyanja. <DT><SAMP>‘oc’</SAMP> <DD> Occitan; Provençal. <DT><SAMP>‘oj’</SAMP> <DD> Ojibwa. <DT><SAMP>‘om’</SAMP> <DD> (Afan) Oromo. <DT><SAMP>‘or’</SAMP> <DD> Oriya. <DT><SAMP>‘os’</SAMP> <DD> Ossetian; Ossetic. <DT><SAMP>‘pa’</SAMP> <DD> Panjabi; Punjabi. <DT><SAMP>‘pi’</SAMP> <DD> Pali. <DT><SAMP>‘pl’</SAMP> <DD> Polish. <DT><SAMP>‘ps’</SAMP> <DD> Pashto, Pushto. <DT><SAMP>‘pt’</SAMP> <DD> Portuguese. <DT><SAMP>‘qu’</SAMP> <DD> Quechua. <DT><SAMP>‘rm’</SAMP> <DD> Rhaeto-Romance. <DT><SAMP>‘rn’</SAMP> <DD> Rundi; Kirundi. <DT><SAMP>‘ro’</SAMP> <DD> Romanian. <DT><SAMP>‘ru’</SAMP> <DD> Russian. <DT><SAMP>‘rw’</SAMP> <DD> Kinyarwanda. <DT><SAMP>‘sa’</SAMP> <DD> Sanskrit. <DT><SAMP>‘sc’</SAMP> <DD> Sardinian. <DT><SAMP>‘sd’</SAMP> <DD> Sindhi. <DT><SAMP>‘se’</SAMP> <DD> Northern Sami. <DT><SAMP>‘sg’</SAMP> <DD> Sango; Sangro. <DT><SAMP>‘si’</SAMP> <DD> Sinhala; Sinhalese. <DT><SAMP>‘sk’</SAMP> <DD> Slovak. <DT><SAMP>‘sl’</SAMP> <DD> Slovenian. <DT><SAMP>‘sm’</SAMP> <DD> Samoan. <DT><SAMP>‘sn’</SAMP> <DD> Shona. <DT><SAMP>‘so’</SAMP> <DD> Somali. <DT><SAMP>‘sq’</SAMP> <DD> Albanian. <DT><SAMP>‘sr’</SAMP> <DD> Serbian. <DT><SAMP>‘ss’</SAMP> <DD> Swati; Siswati. <DT><SAMP>‘st’</SAMP> <DD> Sesotho; Sotho, Southern. <DT><SAMP>‘su’</SAMP> <DD> Sundanese. <DT><SAMP>‘sv’</SAMP> <DD> Swedish. <DT><SAMP>‘sw’</SAMP> <DD> Swahili. <DT><SAMP>‘ta’</SAMP> <DD> Tamil. <DT><SAMP>‘te’</SAMP> <DD> Telugu. <DT><SAMP>‘tg’</SAMP> <DD> Tajik. <DT><SAMP>‘th’</SAMP> <DD> Thai. <DT><SAMP>‘ti’</SAMP> <DD> Tigrinya. <DT><SAMP>‘tk’</SAMP> <DD> Turkmen. <DT><SAMP>‘tl’</SAMP> <DD> Tagalog. <DT><SAMP>‘tn’</SAMP> <DD> Tswana; Setswana. <DT><SAMP>‘to’</SAMP> <DD> Tonga. <DT><SAMP>‘tr’</SAMP> <DD> Turkish. <DT><SAMP>‘ts’</SAMP> <DD> Tsonga. <DT><SAMP>‘tt’</SAMP> <DD> Tatar. <DT><SAMP>‘tw’</SAMP> <DD> Twi. <DT><SAMP>‘ty’</SAMP> <DD> Tahitian. <DT><SAMP>‘ug’</SAMP> <DD> Uighur. <DT><SAMP>‘uk’</SAMP> <DD> Ukrainian. <DT><SAMP>‘ur’</SAMP> <DD> Urdu. <DT><SAMP>‘uz’</SAMP> <DD> Uzbek. <DT><SAMP>‘ve’</SAMP> <DD> Venda. <DT><SAMP>‘vi’</SAMP> <DD> Vietnamese. <DT><SAMP>‘vo’</SAMP> <DD> Volapük; Volapuk. <DT><SAMP>‘wa’</SAMP> <DD> Walloon. <DT><SAMP>‘wo’</SAMP> <DD> Wolof. <DT><SAMP>‘xh’</SAMP> <DD> Xhosa. <DT><SAMP>‘yi’</SAMP> <DD> Yiddish (formerly ji). <DT><SAMP>‘yo’</SAMP> <DD> Yoruba. <DT><SAMP>‘za’</SAMP> <DD> Zhuang. <DT><SAMP>‘zh’</SAMP> <DD> Chinese. <DT><SAMP>‘zu’</SAMP> <DD> Zulu. </DL> <H2><A NAME="SEC317" HREF="gettext_toc.html#TOC317">A.2 Rare Language Codes</A></H2> <P> 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. </P> <DL COMPACT> <DT><SAMP>‘ace’</SAMP> <DD> Achinese. <DT><SAMP>‘awa’</SAMP> <DD> Awadhi. <DT><SAMP>‘bad’</SAMP> <DD> Banda. <DT><SAMP>‘bal’</SAMP> <DD> Baluchi. <DT><SAMP>‘ban’</SAMP> <DD> Balinese. <DT><SAMP>‘bem’</SAMP> <DD> Bemba. <DT><SAMP>‘bho’</SAMP> <DD> Bhojpuri. <DT><SAMP>‘bik’</SAMP> <DD> Bikol. <DT><SAMP>‘bin’</SAMP> <DD> Bini. <DT><SAMP>‘btk’</SAMP> <DD> Batak (Indonesia). <DT><SAMP>‘bug’</SAMP> <DD> Buginese. <DT><SAMP>‘ceb’</SAMP> <DD> Cebuano. <DT><SAMP>‘din’</SAMP> <DD> Dinka. <DT><SAMP>‘doi’</SAMP> <DD> Dogri. <DT><SAMP>‘fil’</SAMP> <DD> Filipino; Pilipino. <DT><SAMP>‘fon’</SAMP> <DD> Fon. <DT><SAMP>‘gon’</SAMP> <DD> Gondi. <DT><SAMP>‘gsw’</SAMP> <DD> Alemani; Swiss German. <DT><SAMP>‘hil’</SAMP> <DD> Hiligaynon. <DT><SAMP>‘hmn’</SAMP> <DD> Hmong. <DT><SAMP>‘ilo’</SAMP> <DD> Iloko. <DT><SAMP>‘kab’</SAMP> <DD> Kabyle. <DT><SAMP>‘kam’</SAMP> <DD> Kamba. <DT><SAMP>‘kbd’</SAMP> <DD> Kabardian. <DT><SAMP>‘kmb’</SAMP> <DD> Kimbundu. <DT><SAMP>‘kok’</SAMP> <DD> Konkani. <DT><SAMP>‘kru’</SAMP> <DD> Kurukh. <DT><SAMP>‘lua’</SAMP> <DD> Luba-Lulua. <DT><SAMP>‘luo’</SAMP> <DD> Luo (Kenya and Tanzania). <DT><SAMP>‘mad’</SAMP> <DD> Madurese. <DT><SAMP>‘mag’</SAMP> <DD> Magahi. <DT><SAMP>‘mai’</SAMP> <DD> Maithili. <DT><SAMP>‘mak’</SAMP> <DD> Makasar. <DT><SAMP>‘man’</SAMP> <DD> Mandingo. <DT><SAMP>‘men’</SAMP> <DD> Mende. <DT><SAMP>‘min’</SAMP> <DD> Minangkabau. <DT><SAMP>‘mni’</SAMP> <DD> Manipuri. <DT><SAMP>‘mos’</SAMP> <DD> Mossi. <DT><SAMP>‘mwr’</SAMP> <DD> Marwari. <DT><SAMP>‘nap’</SAMP> <DD> Neapolitan. <DT><SAMP>‘nso’</SAMP> <DD> Pedi; Sepedi; Northern Sotho. <DT><SAMP>‘nym’</SAMP> <DD> Nyamwezi. <DT><SAMP>‘nyn’</SAMP> <DD> Nyankole. <DT><SAMP>‘pag’</SAMP> <DD> Pangasinan. <DT><SAMP>‘pam’</SAMP> <DD> Pampanga. <DT><SAMP>‘raj’</SAMP> <DD> Rajasthani. <DT><SAMP>‘sas’</SAMP> <DD> Sasak. <DT><SAMP>‘sat’</SAMP> <DD> Santali. <DT><SAMP>‘scn’</SAMP> <DD> Sicilian. <DT><SAMP>‘shn’</SAMP> <DD> Shan. <DT><SAMP>‘sid’</SAMP> <DD> Sidamo. <DT><SAMP>‘srr’</SAMP> <DD> Serer. <DT><SAMP>‘suk’</SAMP> <DD> Sukuma. <DT><SAMP>‘sus’</SAMP> <DD> Susu. <DT><SAMP>‘tem’</SAMP> <DD> Timne. <DT><SAMP>‘tiv’</SAMP> <DD> Tiv. <DT><SAMP>‘tum’</SAMP> <DD> Tumbuka. <DT><SAMP>‘umb’</SAMP> <DD> Umbundu. <DT><SAMP>‘wal’</SAMP> <DD> Walamo. <DT><SAMP>‘war’</SAMP> <DD> Waray. <DT><SAMP>‘yao’</SAMP> <DD> Yao. </DL> <P><HR><P> Go to the <A HREF="gettext_1.html">first</A>, <A HREF="gettext_16.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="gettext_18.html">next</A>, <A HREF="gettext_25.html">last</A> section, <A HREF="gettext_toc.html">table of contents</A>. </BODY> </HTML>