Sarikoli
0 sources
Sarikoli is an intangible cultural heritage located in the People's Republic of China[1].
Sarikoli
Summary
Sarikoli is a natural language[1]. Sarikoli draws 132 Wikipedia views per month (natural_language category, ranking #233 of 734).[2]
Key Facts
- Sarikoli is in the country of People's Republic of China[3].
- Sarikoli is in the country of Pakistan[4].
- Sarikoli's instance of is recorded as natural language[5].
- Sarikoli's instance of is recorded as modern language[6].
- Sarikoli's ISO 639-3 code is recorded as srh[7].
- Sarikoli's subclass of is recorded as Shughni-Rushani[8].
- Sarikoli's IETF language tag is recorded as srh[9].
- Sarikoli's Wikimedia language code is recorded as srh[10].
- Sarikoli's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0g2kkk[11].
- Sarikoli's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Sarikoli language[12].
- Sarikoli's number of speakers, writers, or signers is recorded as {'amount': '+16000'}[13].
- Sarikoli's Glottolog code is recorded as sari1246[14].
- Sarikoli's Ethnologue.com language code is recorded as srh[15].
- Sarikoli's distribution map is recorded as Sarikoli Language in Xinjiang.png[16].
- Sarikoli's UNESCO language status is recorded as 3 definitely endangered[17].
- Sarikoli's endangeredlanguages.com ID is recorded as 5413[18].
- Sarikoli's indigenous to is recorded as Xinjiang[19].
- Sarikoli's UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger ID is recorded as 1461[20].
- Sarikoli's BabelNet ID is recorded as 03480301n[21].
- Sarikoli's exact match is recorded as http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/language/SRH[22].
- Sarikoli's Ethnologue language status is recorded as 6b Threatened[23].
- Sarikoli's Wikimedia Incubator URL is recorded as https://incubator.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wp/srh[24].
Why It Matters
Sarikoli draws 132 Wikipedia views per month (natural_language category, ranking #233 of 734).[2] Sarikoli has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] Sarikoli is known by 18 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]