Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

ISO 639-6

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Deprecated language code standard

ISO 639-6,Codes for the representation of names of languages—Part 6: Alpha-4 code for comprehensive coverage of language variants, was a proposed international standard in theISO 639 series, developed by ISO/TC 37/SC 2.[1] It contained four-letter codes that denote variants of languages and language families. This allowed one to differentiate between, for example, historical (glvx) versus revived (rvmx)Manx, whileISO 639-3 only includesglv for Manx.

The data supporting ISO 639-6 was researched and compiled by the ISO's registration authority GeoLang. ISO 639-6 was published on 17 November 2009, and withdrawn on 25 November 2014 because of concerns about its usefulness and maintainability.[2][3] The database also links each language and family to its principal ancestor, allowing the user to follow the classification of various languages. For example, the codes and ancestry ofEnglish is given below:

ISO 639-6
code
Language(s)ISO 639-3
scope
ISO 639-3
type
ISO 639-2/3
code
ISO 639-2/5
code
 EnglishIndividualLivingeng 
emenEarly Modern English (ca. 1485 – ca. 1660)IndividualLiving(eng) 
emseEarly Midland and South Eastern Middle EnglishIndividualHistoric(enm) 
mengMiddle English (ca. 1066 – ca. 1350)IndividualHistoricenm 
angoAnglo Saxon (Old English) (ca. 450 – ca. 1250)IndividualHistoricang 
anglAnglicCollective  (gmw)
nseaNorth Sea (Ingvaeonic)Collective  (gmw)
gmcwWest GermanicCollective  gmw
grmcGermanicCollective  gem
ineuIndo-EuropeanCollective  ine
wrldWorld (undetermined)Special und 

The database differentiated between different scripts used for the same language. For example, a number of different scripts were used in theOttoman Empire and as a result theOttoman Turkish language has been categorized as follows:

ISO 639-6
code
Language or variantISO 639-3
scope
ISO 639-3
type
ISO 639-2/3
code
ISO 15924
code
 Turkish, Ottoman (1500–1928)IndividualHistoricota 
otaaTurkish, Ottoman (1500–1928),Armenian scriptIndividualHistoricotaArmn
otahTurkish, Ottoman (1500–1928),Hellenic scriptIndividualHistoricotaGrek
otapTurkish, Ottoman (1500–1928),Perso-Arabic scriptIndividualHistoricotaArab

See also

[edit]
  • List of ISO 639-6 codes
  • ISO 639-5: 3-letter codes for language families and groups ("remainder" groups from legacy ISO 639-2 were extended inclusively in ISO 639-5).
  • ISO 15924: 4-letter codes for the representation of names of scripts (most of them also used in BCP 47 as "script subtags").
  • IETF language tag: 5-to-8-letter codes used as "variant subtags", assigned and maintained in the IANA database for BCP 47 language tags.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ISO/TC 37/SC 2 (International Organization for Standardization, Technical Committee 37, Subcommittee 2:Terminographical and lexicographical working methods – later renamed toTerminology workflow and language coding).
  2. ^"ISO 639-6:2009".ISO. Archived fromthe original on 2018-10-31. Retrieved2018-10-31.
  3. ^Constable, Peter (21 October 2014)."FYI: withdrawal of ISO 639-6". Archived fromthe original on 21 August 2019. Retrieved21 August 2019.


1–9999
10000–19999
20000–29999
30000+


Stub icon

Thisstandards- ormeasurement-related article is astub. You can help Wikipedia byadding missing information.

Stub icon

Thislanguage-related article is astub. You can help Wikipedia byadding missing information.

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=ISO_639-6&oldid=1308007352"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp