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Science, Social Sciences, Linguistics, Languages, Natural
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See Also:
Editor's Picks:
- This website contains links to all of the serious if not complete grammars of languages on the Web. It currently contains links to grammars of more than 80 different languages.
- Extensive information and web links on languages.
- Translations of one poem into 82 languages by native speakers.
- Attempt at showing a genetic relationship among four language groups not normally thought of as related.
- 30,000 selected links to as many as 400 different languages, plus the first internet library of multilingual parallel texts.
- A java applet to test your language skills in French, Spanish, German and Czech.
- Language and linguistics resources for Asian languages including Japanese hiragana with vocabulary, a Korean linguistics glossary, Mandarin Chinese and Old English with romanization and transliteration.
- Working to develop a contemporary version of the historic Rosetta Stone, a meaningful survey and near permanent archive of 1,000 languages.
- The Human-Languages Page is a comprehensive catalog of language-related Internet resources. The over 1900 links in the HLP database have been hand-reviewed to bring the best language links the Web has to offer.
- How to say hello, please, thank you, and other basic social phrases, in hundreds of languages. Includes links to dictionaries, phrase guides, and other resources for many of the world's languages and countries.
- List of world language hierarchies.
- Searchable information on language families, employment opportunities, publications, text and computer tools, language study and pedagogy.
- The personal website of Robert Beard, devoted to the study of morphology, especially Beard's theory of 'Lexeme-Morpheme Base Morphology'. It is linked to an index of on-line dictionaries and grammars, and several pages of linguistic fun.
- Short sample texts of more than 1200 languages and dialects in the world.
- Online shop of teaching materials on various European languages (including some quite rare ones) plus Esperanto.
- Extensive database of the world's languages, organized/searchable by map, language family, country, and language name. From SIL International. Also offers print and CD-ROM versions.
- A different world language is examined each week. Includes archives of past weeks.
- A description of major world languages and language families, with links.
- Directory of language families and individual language pages, online dictionaries, and other resources.
- Information on less-commonly taught languages.
- Estimates for the world's top 20 languages (given in millions) on the basis of the number of mother-tongue (first-language) speakers and population estimates for those countries where the language has official status.
- low-cost, no-nonsense, user-friendly computer programs to help beginning and intermediate students master the vocabulary and/or basic grammar of a variety of ancient, medieval, and modern languages.
- List-servers for a wide variety of language studies, from Nostratic to Spanish and Tolkien.
- Multilingual corpus server located at the Department of General Linguistics, University of Helsinki. Contains some samples from the rarer languages.
- The Lord's Prayer in more than one thousand languages and dialects.
- Maps of the various language families, with background reference material, based on Encyclopaedia Britannica material.
- Mini-essays about human language in its endless kaleidoscope of aspects.
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