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Encyclopedia > Ethnologue project

The Ethnologue: Languages of the World is a web and print publication of SIL International (formerly known as the Summer Institute of Linguistics), a Christian linguistic service organization which studies lesser-known languages primarily to provide the speakers with native language biblical texts. It contains statistics for 6,809 languages (2000 edition) and gives the number of speakers, location, dialects, linguistic affiliations, availability of the Bible, etc. It is currently the most comprehensive existing language inventory, along with the Linguasphere Register (http://www.linguasphere.net/).


What counts as a language depends on socio-linguistic evaluation: see Dialect.


The Ethnologue provides a three-letter code, called SIL code, for each language it describes, the number of which significantly exceeds those of ISO 639 and RFC 3066.


The neutrality of Ethnologue as a scientific institution is sometimes disputed, particularly in areas of language classification associated with the Bible and Abrahamic religion. A notable case is the classification of Arabic and Hebrew, which some suggest is influenced by the scriptural idea of Ishmael and Isaac being brothers. It lists them as both South Central Semitic as opposed to Aramaic, although the scholarly consensus is nearly unanimous that Hebrew and Aramaic group together against Arabic.


In addition to choosing a primary name for the language, it also gives some of the names by which a language is called by its speakers, by the government, by foreigners, by neighbors, etc., and how it has been named and referenced historically, regardless of which designation is considered official, politically correct, or offensive, or by whom. This selection of "alternative names" is extensive, but often incomplete.


As is inevitable in an enterprise so enormous, the Ethnologue contains some errors, some of which it fixes at every edition; for instance, en route to the 14th edition, some languages such as Chenoua were added, and some rumoured "languages" such as Nemadi or Wutana were removed. Some possible remaining errors are discussed at Imraguen language, Senhaja de Srair language, Ghomara language, Kwavi language, Molengue language, Yauma language, Fer language, Yeni language, and Ofayé.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Ethnologue: Who We Are (461 words)
The Ethnologue database has been an active research project for more than fifty years.
Each time a new edition of the Ethnologue is published, we include these maps in the printed volumes.
Contact the Ethnologue editor for questions or comments on the language data content
ArcNews Spring 2006 Issue -- Pinpointing the Languages of the World with GIS (866 words)
In 1992, the project began generating the maps using GIS, and since then increasing numbers of maps have been included with each edition so that now maps are published for most countries of the world.
Every four years, a new edition of the book is published, and the continually updated database is available online at www.ethnologue.com, which includes maps and an extensive bibliography with citations for thousands of published works with additional information about the languages of the world.
Bill Dickson, GMI, says that the worldwide GIS point, polygon, and Ethnologue attribute data from the Language Mapping Project is available to the GIS community as the World Language Mapping System (www.gmi.org/wlms).
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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