Amharic Wikipedia
0 sources
Amharic Wikipedia
Summary
Amharic Wikipedia is a Wikipedia language edition[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Amharic Wikipedia's instance of is recorded as Wikipedia language edition[3].
- Amharic Wikipedia's owned by is recorded as Wikimedia Foundation[4].
- Amharic Wikipedia's operator is recorded as Wikimedia Foundation[5].
- Amharic Wikipedia's logo image is recorded as Wikipedia-logo-v2-am.svg[6].
- Amharic Wikipedia's copyright license is recorded as Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported[7].
- Amharic Wikipedia's copyright license is recorded as GNU Free Documentation License[8].
- Amharic Wikipedia's Commons category is recorded as Amharic Wikipedia[9].
- Amharic Wikipedia's language of work or name is recorded as Q28244[10].
- Amharic Wikipedia's Wikimedia language code is recorded as am[11].
- +2002-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Amharic Wikipedia[12].
- Amharic Wikipedia's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03cc89d[13].
- Amharic Wikipedia's official website is recorded as https://am.wikipedia.org/[14].
- Amharic Wikipedia's Wikimedia database name is recorded as amwiki[15].
- Amharic Wikipedia's number of records is recorded as {'amount': '+14847'}[16].
- Amharic Wikipedia's number of records is recorded as {'amount': '+15252'}[17].
- Amharic Wikipedia's number of records is recorded as {'amount': '+15588'}[18].
- Amharic Wikipedia's copyright status is recorded as copyrighted[19].
- Amharic Wikipedia's API endpoint URL is recorded as https://am.wikipedia.org/w/api.php[20].
- Amharic Wikipedia's random page URL is recorded as https://am.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E1%88%8D%E1%8B%A9:Random[21].
Body
Founding
+2002-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Amharic Wikipedia[12].
Operations
Amharic Wikipedia's operator is recorded as Wikimedia Foundation[5].
Ownership
Amharic Wikipedia's owned by is recorded as Wikimedia Foundation[4].
Why It Matters
Amharic Wikipedia has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 18 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]