Arab-Christians
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Arab-Christians
Summary
Arab-Christians is an ethnoreligious group[1]. Arab-Christians draws 568 Wikipedia views per month (ethnoreligious_group category, ranking #14 of 45).[2]
Key Facts
- Arabic was Arab-Christians's native language[3].
- English was Arab-Christians's native language[4].
- French was Arab-Christians's native language[5].
- Portuguese was Arab-Christians's native language[6].
- Spanish was Arab-Christians's native language[7].
- Dutch was Arab-Christians's native language[8].
- Arab-Christians's religion is recorded as Christianity[9].
- Arab-Christians is in the country of Syria[10].
- Arab-Christians is in the country of Lebanon[11].
- Arab-Christians is in the country of Iraq[12].
- Arab-Christians is in the country of Jordan[13].
- Arab-Christians is in the country of Egypt[14].
- Arab-Christians is in the country of Morocco[15].
- Arab-Christians's image is recorded as Arab Christian.jpg[16].
- Arab-Christians's instance of is recorded as ethnoreligious group[17].
- Arab-Christians's subclass of is recorded as Arabs[18].
- Arab-Christians's Commons category is recorded as Arab Christians[19].
- Arab-Christians's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03ck8x[20].
- Arab-Christians's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Arab Christians[21].
- Arab-Christians's population is recorded as {'amount': '+33000000'}[22].
- Arab-Christians's population is recorded as {'amount': '+22000000'}[23].
- Arab-Christians's history of topic is recorded as history of Arab Christians[24].
- Arab-Christians's Quora topic ID is recorded as Arab-Christians[25].
- Arab-Christians's Orthodox Encyclopedia ID is recorded as 75806[26].
- Arab-Christians's National Library of Israel J9U ID is recorded as 987014366900105171[27].
Why It Matters
Arab-Christians draws 568 Wikipedia views per month (ethnoreligious_group category, ranking #14 of 45).[2] Arab-Christians has Wikipedia articles in 25 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Arab-Christians is known by 10 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]