Interslavic
0 sources
Interslavic
Summary
Interslavic is an international auxiliary language[1]. Interslavic ranks in the top 8% of international_auxiliary_language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (406 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Interslavic is the creator of Vojtěch Merunka[3].
- Interslavic is the creator of Jan van Steenbergen[4].
- Interslavic's image is recorded as Vojtěch Merunka and Jan van Steenbergen at CISLa 2018.jpg[5].
- Interslavic's instance of is recorded as international auxiliary language[6].
- Interslavic's instance of is recorded as pan-Slavic language[7].
- Interslavic's instance of is recorded as zonal auxiliary language[8].
- Interslavic's flag image is recorded as Flag of Interslavic.svg[9].
- Interslavic's movement is recorded as pan-slavism[10].
- Interslavic's movement is recorded as Euro-Slavism[11].
- Interslavic's flag is recorded as Interslavic flag[12].
- Interslavic's ISO 639-3 code is recorded as isv[13].
- Interslavic's writing system is recorded as Latin script[14].
- Interslavic's writing system is recorded as Cyrillic script[15].
- Interslavic's IETF language tag is recorded as isv[16].
- Interslavic's Commons category is recorded as Interslavic[17].
- Interslavic's said to be the same as is recorded as Neoslavonic[18].
- +2006-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Interslavic[19].
- Interslavic's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/09gp8qp[20].
- Interslavic's official website is recorded as http://steen.free.fr/interslavic/index.html[21].
- Interslavic's official website is recorded as https://interslavic-language.org/[22].
- Interslavic's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Interslavic[23].
- Slavic inspired Interslavic[24].
- Slavs inspired Interslavic[25].
- Old Church Slavonic inspired Interslavic[26].
- Interslavic's described at URL is recorded as https://database.conlang.org/view/?conlang=280[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Created works include Vojtěch Merunka[3], a programmer[28], b. 1967[29], of Czech Republic[30], specialised in computer modeling[31] and Jan van Steenbergen[4], a poet[32], b. 1970[33], of Kingdom of the Netherlands[34].
Why It Matters
Interslavic ranks in the top 8% of international_auxiliary_language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (406 views/month).[2] Interslavic has Wikipedia articles in 27 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[35] Interslavic is known by 21 alternative names across languages and contexts.[36]