multilingualism
0 sources
multilingualism
Summary
multilingualism is a field of study[1]. multilingualism ranks in the top 4% of field_of_study entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,965 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- multilingualism's instance of is recorded as field of study[3].
- multilingualism's instance of is recorded as field of study[4].
- multilingualism's instance of is recorded as social system[5].
- multilingualism is a type of aptitude[6].
- multilingualism's Commons category is recorded as Multilingualism[7].
- multilingualism is the opposite of monolingualism[8].
- multilingualism's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Multilingualism[9].
- multilingualism's described by source is recorded as Soziolinguistika Hiztegia[10].
- multilingualism's different from is recorded as multiple languages[11].
- multilingualism's different from is recorded as polyglot[12].
- multilingualism's studied by is recorded as sociolinguistics[13].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded instance of include field of study[3] and social system[5]. multilingualism is a type of aptitude[6]. multilingualism is the opposite of monolingualism[8].
Why It Matters
multilingualism ranks in the top 4% of field_of_study entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,965 views/month).[2] multilingualism has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[14] multilingualism is known by 58 alternative names across languages and contexts.[15]