Arne Goetje, 2008-10-27 14:27:23-0000:
> Kaihsu Tai wrote:
> > http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=nan
>
> While we are at it:
> 1. ethnologue is not the authoritative data regarding language codes.
> That's ISO 639-3.
Sorry, my fault. But the web version of Ethologue does show
ISO 639-3 code on the top of the language page.
> 2. There has been a proposal filed at ISO 639-3 to split the nan code
> into dzu and xim, reflecting the Chaozhou and Xiamen dialects. As they
> group the Taiwan dialect into the Xiamen group, we should probably use
> xim_TW in future... ? (
> http://www.sil.org/iso639-3/chg_detail.asp?id=2008-083&lang=nan )
Indeed the language as spoken in Taiwan is in the Xiamen
(Amoy = Ē-mn̂g) group. But we should only change the code
from ‘nan’ to whatever when it becomes officially approved.
Arne Goetje, 2008-10-27 14:27:23-0000: www.ethnologue. com/show_ language. asp?code= nan
> Kaihsu Tai wrote:
> > http://
>
> While we are at it:
> 1. ethnologue is not the authoritative data regarding language codes.
> That's ISO 639-3.
Sorry, my fault. But the web version of Ethologue does show
ISO 639-3 code on the top of the language page.
> 2. There has been a proposal filed at ISO 639-3 to split the nan code www.sil. org/iso639- 3/chg_detail. asp?id= 2008-083& lang=nan )
> into dzu and xim, reflecting the Chaozhou and Xiamen dialects. As they
> group the Taiwan dialect into the Xiamen group, we should probably use
> xim_TW in future... ? (
> http://
Indeed the language as spoken in Taiwan is in the Xiamen
(Amoy = Ē-mn̂g) group. But we should only change the code
from ‘nan’ to whatever when it becomes officially approved.
Cheers!
-- www.un. org/disarmament /
2008-10-24/30 Disarmament Week http://