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The Khitan language is a now-extinct language once spoken by the Khitan people. Current distribution of Human Language Families A language family is a group of related languages said to have descended from a common proto-language. ...
Altaic is a proposed language family which includes 66 languages [1] spoken by about 348 million people, mostly in and around Central Asia and northeast Asia. ...
Altaic is a putative language family which would include 60 languages spoken by about 250 million people, mostly in and around central Asia. ...
The Mongolic languages are a group of thirteen languages spoken in Central Asia. ...
ISO 639-1 is the first part of the ISO 639 international-standard language-code family. ...
ISO 639-2 is the second part of the ISO 639 standard, which lists codes for the representation of the names of languages. ...
ISO 639-3 is an international standard for language codes. ...
Articles with similar titles include the NATO phonetic alphabet, which has also informally been called the âInternational Phonetic Alphabetâ. For information on how to read IPA transcriptions of English words, see IPA chart for English. ...
Unicode is an industry standard designed to allow text and symbols from all of the writing systems of the world to be consistently represented and manipulated by computers. ...
The Khitan (or Khitai, Chinese: ; pinyin: QìdÄn) were an ethnic group which dominated much of Manchuria in the 11th century and has been classified by Chinese historians as one of the Eastern proto-Mongolic ethnic groups Donghu (æ±è¡æ dÅng hú zú). They established the Liao Dynasty in 907...
It was written in Khitan script. The Khitan language is a now-extinct language once spoken by the Khitan people. ...
See also
The Khitan (or Khitai, Chinese: ; pinyin: QìdÄn) were an ethnic group which dominated much of Manchuria in the 11th century and has been classified by Chinese historians as one of the Eastern proto-Mongolic ethnic groups Donghu (æ±è¡æ dÅng hú zú). They established the Liao Dynasty in 907...
Notes - ^ "[1] Ethnologue"
Works concerning Khitan Franks, H. (1976): "Two Chinese-Khitan Macaronic Poems." In: Heissig, W.-Krueger, J. R.-Oinas, F. J.-Schütz, E. (eds): Tradata Altaica. Wiesbaden, Otto Harrassowitz. Qinge'ertai [Chinggeltei]-Yu Baolin-Chen Naixiong-Liu Fengzhu-Xin Fuli (1985): Qidan xiao zi yanjiu [A Study of the Khitan Small Script]. Beijing, Zhonguo shehui kexue chu-banshe. Vovin, Alexander (2003) "Once Again on Khitan Words in Chinese-Khitan Mixed Verses" Acta Orientalia Scientificarum Academiae HungaricaeVolume 56, Numbers 2-4, pp. 237-244 |