Rohingya
0 sources
Rohingya
Summary
Rohingya is a natural language[1]. Rohingya draws 256 Wikipedia views per month (natural_language category, ranking #170 of 734).[2]
Key Facts
- Rohingya is in the country of Bangladesh[3].
- Rohingya is in the country of Myanmar[4].
- Rohingya's image is recorded as Rohingya.png[5].
- Rohingya's instance of is recorded as natural language[6].
- Rohingya's instance of is recorded as modern language[7].
- Rohingya's flag image is recorded as Rohingya flag.svg[8].
- Rohingya's ISO 639-3 code is recorded as rhg[9].
- Rohingya's subclass of is recorded as Chittagonian[10].
- Rohingya's writing system is recorded as Arabic alphabet[11].
- Rohingya's writing system is recorded as Hanifi Rohingya[12].
- Rohingya's writing system is recorded as Latin script[13].
- Rohingya's IETF language tag is recorded as rhg[14].
- Rohingya's Commons category is recorded as Rohingya language[15].
- Rohingya's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/063pbr[16].
- Rohingya's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Rohingya language[17].
- Rohingya's number of speakers, writers, or signers is recorded as {'amount': '+1800000'}[18].
- Rohingya's OmegaWiki Defined Meaning is recorded as 1290462[19].
- Rohingya's ABS ASCL 2011 code is recorded as 6104[20].
- Rohingya's Glottolog code is recorded as rohi1238[21].
- Rohingya's Ethnologue.com language code is recorded as rhg[22].
- Rohingya's indigenous to is recorded as Chattogram Division[23].
- Rohingya's indigenous to is recorded as Arkan[24].
- Rohingya's exact match is recorded as http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/language/RHG[25].
- Rohingya's Ethnologue language status is recorded as 6a Vigorous[26].
- Rohingya's linguistic typology is recorded as subject–object–verb[27].
Why It Matters
Rohingya draws 256 Wikipedia views per month (natural_language category, ranking #170 of 734).[2] Rohingya has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Rohingya is known by 10 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]