Glosa
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Glosa
Summary
Glosa is an international auxiliary language[1]. Glosa draws 143 Wikipedia views per month (international_auxiliary_language category, ranking #5 of 13).[2]
Key Facts
- Glosa is credited with the discovery of Ron Clark[3].
- Glosa is credited with the discovery of Wendy Ashby[4].
- Glosa's instance of is recorded as international auxiliary language[5].
- Glosa's instance of is recorded as constructed language[6].
- Glosa's based on is recorded as Interglossa[7].
- Glosa's writing system is recorded as Latin script[8].
- 1981 marks the founding of Glosa[9].
- Glosa's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Glosa language[10].
- Glosa's described at URL is recorded as https://database.conlang.org/view/?conlang=232[11].
- Glosa's described at URL is recorded as https://cals.info/language/glosa/[12].
- Glosa's described at URL is recorded as http://inthelandofinventedlanguages.com/index.php?page=languages&id=460[13].
- Glosa's described at URL is recorded as https://langmaker.github.io/db/mdl_glosa.htm[14].
- Glosa's Stack Exchange tag is recorded as https://conlang.stackexchange.com/tags/glosa[15].
- Glosa's different from is recorded as Glosa[16].
- Glosa's different from is recorded as Glossa[17].
- Glosa's exact match is recorded as http://data.linguistik.de/bll/bll-ontology#Glosa[18].
- Glosa's linguistic typology is recorded as isolating language[19].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded instance of include international auxiliary language[5] and constructed language[6].
Origins
1981 marks the founding of Glosa[9].
Why It Matters
Glosa draws 143 Wikipedia views per month (international_auxiliary_language category, ranking #5 of 13).[2] Glosa has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20]