Hulaulá
0 sources
Hulaulá
Summary
Hulaulá is a language[1]. Hulaulá ranks in the top 4% of language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (40 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Hulaulá is in the country of Israel[3].
- Hulaulá's instance of is recorded as language[4].
- Hulaulá's instance of is recorded as modern language[5].
- Hulaulá's ISO 639-3 code is recorded as huy[6].
- Hulaulá's subclass of is recorded as Northeastern Neo-Aramaic[7].
- Hulaulá's writing system is recorded as Hebrew-script-based alphabet[8].
- Hulaulá's IETF language tag is recorded as huy[9].
- Hulaulá's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04zxk0[10].
- Hulaulá's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Hulaulá language[11].
- Hulaulá's Art & Architecture Thesaurus ID is recorded as 300388437[12].
- Hulaulá's number of speakers, writers, or signers is recorded as {'amount': '+10000'}[13].
- Hulaulá's OmegaWiki Defined Meaning is recorded as 722047[14].
- Hulaulá's Glottolog code is recorded as hula1244[15].
- Hulaulá's Ethnologue.com language code is recorded as huy[16].
- Hulaulá's endangeredlanguages.com ID is recorded as 4288[17].
- Hulaulá's indigenous to is recorded as Northern District[18].
- Hulaulá's UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger ID is recorded as 2173[19].
- Hulaulá's UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger ID is recorded as 2203[20].
- Hulaulá's exact match is recorded as http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/language/HUY[21].
- Hulaulá's Ethnologue language status is recorded as 8a Moribund[22].
Why It Matters
Hulaulá ranks in the top 4% of language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (40 views/month).[2] Hulaulá has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] Hulaulá is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]