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[lojban] Re: Language Names, please.
Robin Lee Powell wrote:
> Need to fill in the names for these languages in lojban for jbovlaste:
I suggest http://www.languages-in-languages.de.vu/ (a redirector, btw),
which uses Unicode to represent the names of languages.
(I'd look it up for you, but timwi runs his site on port 8989 which I can't
access through this firewall.)
> sk - Slovak - Slovencina
> sl - Slovenian - Slovenscina
I think the first needs a hachek on the c, and the second on both the s and
the c. That is,
sk - Slovak - Slovenčina
sl - Slovenian - Slovenščina
Based on vague recollection and the fact that Googling produces a fair
number of hits. (They could be in the wrong language, though, for example in
Czech talking about Slovak, or in Croatian talking about Slovenian, or
whatever. Better double-check.)
> vi - Vietnamese - Tiêng Viêt
I *think* this might be Tiếng Việt instead (the first being "e
with circumflex and acute", the second being "e with circumflex and dot
below"), based on search results for "tie^'ng Vie^.t" in Google, which gets
quite a lot of hits. (That being the VIQR [Vietnamese Quoted-Readable]
representation, if I remember correctly.)
> uk - Ukrainian -
> Укранська
> ; - vukro
I think this should be
Українська ,
with an extra "yi" before the n. I'm pretty sure there's *some* vowel
missing ("Ukrans'ka" sounds implausible to me) but I'm not sure whether it's
i (і), yi (ї), or y (и). [Hmm, based on googling again,
I'm pretty sure it's "Ukrayins'ka [mova]", i.e. with ї.)
And I'm not sure whether it needs the separate "mova" afterwards (which
means "language") or whether "Ukrains'ka" is enough.
mu'omi'e filip.
[email copies appreciated, since I read the digest]
{ko fukpi mrilu fi mi ki'u le du'u mi te mrilu le notseljmaji}
--
filip.niutyn. <Philip.Newton@datenrevision.de>
All opinions are my own, not my employer's.
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.