Belarusian
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Belarusian
Summary
Belarusian is a language[1]. Belarusian ranks in the top 0.29% of language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,640 views/month, #16 of 5,611).[2]
Key Facts
- Belarusian is in the country of Belarus[3].
- Belarusian is in the country of Poland[4].
- Belarusian is in the country of Lithuania[5].
- Belarusian is in the country of Ukraine[6].
- Belarusian is in the country of Canada[7].
- Belarusian is in the country of United States[8].
- Belarusian's instance of is recorded as language[9].
- Belarusian's instance of is recorded as modern language[10].
- Belarusian followed Ruthenian[11].
- Belarusian is a type of East Slavic[12].
- Belarusian's writing system is recorded as Belarusian Cyrillic alphabet[13].
- Belarusian's writing system is recorded as Latin script[14].
- Belarusian's writing system is recorded as Arabic script[15].
- Belarusian's writing system is recorded as Belarusian Latin alphabet[16].
- Belarusian's writing system is recorded as Belarusian Arabic alphabet[17].
- Belarusian's writing system is recorded as Cyrillic script[18].
- Belarusian's Commons category is recorded as Belarusian language[19].
- Belarusian's Wikimedia language code is recorded as be[20].
- Belarusian began on 1517[21].
- Belarusian's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 53, 'lon': 27}[22].
- Belarusian's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Belarusian language[23].
- Belarusian's language regulatory body is recorded as Yakub Kolas and Yanka Kupala Institute of Language and Literature[24].
- Belarusian's language regulatory body is recorded as National Academy of Sciences of Belarus[25].
- Belarusian's number of speakers, writers, or signers is recorded as {'amount': '+5058400'}[26].
- Belarusian's number of speakers, writers, or signers is recorded as {'amount': '+7900000'}[27].
Why It Matters
Belarusian ranks in the top 0.29% of language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3,640 views/month, #16 of 5,611).[2] Belarusian has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Belarusian is known by 59 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]