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  1. Other Afro-Asiatic languages. Judeo-Berber (a group of different Jewish Berber languages and their dialects) Austronesian languages. Judeo-Malay (Possibly extinct) Dravidian languages. Judeo-Malayalam (both written in local alphabets) Indo-European languages Germanic languages. Jewish English Languages; Lachoudisch (extinct)

  2. As of July 2024, Wikipedia articles have been created in 344 editions, with 331 currently active and 13 closed. [4] The Meta-Wiki language committee manages policies on creating new Wikimedia projects. To be eligible, a language must have a valid ISO 639 code, be "sufficiently unique", and have a "sufficient number of fluent users". [5]

  3. Italic languages in green colours. Length of the Roman rule and the Romance Languages Romance languages in Europe (major dialect groups are also shown). European extent of Romance languages in the 20th century Eastern and Western Romance areas split by the La Spezia–Rimini Line; Southern Romance is represented by Sardinian as an outlier.

  4. A. List of endangered languages in Africa. List of endangered languages in Asia. List of Australian Aboriginal languages.

  5. Guile. Emacs Lisp. JavaScript and some dialects, e.g., JScript. Lua (embedded in many games) OpenCL (extension of C and C++ to use the GPU and parallel extensions of the CPU) OptimJ (extension of Java with language support for writing optimization models and powerful abstractions for bulk data processing) Perl.

  6. The Indo-European languages are a language family native to the overwhelming majority of Europe, the Iranian plateau, and the northern Indian subcontinent. Some European languages of this family— English, French, Portuguese, Russian, Dutch, and Spanish —have expanded through colonialism in the modern period and are now spoken across several ...

  7. Incredible India. India portal. v. t. e. Languages spoken in the Republic of India belong to several language families, the major ones being the Indo-Aryan languages spoken by 78.05% of Indians and the Dravidian languages spoken by 19.64% of Indians; [5] [6] both families together are sometimes known as Indic languages.