What is Ethnologue?

What is Ethnologue?

Ethnologue: Languages of the World is a comprehensive reference work cataloging all of the world’s known living languages. Since 1951, the Ethnologue has been an active research project involving hundreds of linguists and other researchers around the world.

Is Ethnologue reliable?

The Ethnologue is intended to be used as a catalog that provides summary data of identified languages. Information comes from numerous sources and is confirmed by consulting both reliable published sources and a network of field correspondents.

Who runs Ethnologue?

SIL International, United States
Ethnologue

Three-volume 17th edition
Owner SIL International, United States
URL ethnologue.com
Commercial yes

What is an Ethnologue and why do we need it?

It provides an accurate and meaningful image-object-recognition-based description as an ALT (alternate text) tag for images that are not described. It will also extract texts embedded within the image using an OCR (optical character recognition) technology.

How many languages are there in the world Ethnologue?

Overall, the Ethnologue now contains 10,918 language entries reporting on each of the languages in each of the 234 countries in which they are spoken as a first-language.

What is the most spoken language Ethnologue?

1. Chinese — 1.3 Billion Native Speakers. Numbers vary widely — Ethnologue puts the number of native speakers at 1.3 billion native speakers, roughly 1.1 billion of whom speak Mandarin — but there’s no doubt it’s the most spoken language in the world.

What is language death in linguistics?

Language death is a linguistic term for the end or extinction of a language. It is also called language extinction.

How many languages are in the world ethnologue?

Ethnologue (24th edition) has data to indicate that of the currently listed 7,139 living languages, 4,065 have a developed writing system.

What’s the first language in the world?

Dating back to at least 3500 BC, the oldest proof of written Sumerian was found in today’s Iraq, on an artifact known as the Kish Tablet. Thus, given this evidence, Sumerian can also be considered the first language in the world.