Totoro
language
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Totoro
Summary
Totoro is a language[1]. Totoro ranks in the top 5% of language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (6 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Totoro is in the country of Colombia[3].
- Totoro's instance of is recorded as language[4].
- Totoro's instance of is recorded as modern language[5].
- Totoro's ISO 639-3 code is recorded as ttk[6].
- Totoro's subclass of is recorded as Coconucan[7].
- Totoro's IETF language tag is recorded as ttk[8].
- Totoro's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02hxb4m[9].
- Totoro's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Totoro language[10].
- Totoro's Glottolog code is recorded as toto1306[11].
- Totoro's Ethnologue.com language code is recorded as ttk[12].
- Totoro's distribution map is recorded as Totoró.png[13].
- Totoro's UNESCO language status is recorded as 5 critically endangered[14].
- Totoro's endangeredlanguages.com ID is recorded as 3495[15].
- Totoro's indigenous to is recorded as Cauca Department[16].
- Totoro's UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger ID is recorded as 1462[17].
- Totoro's exact match is recorded as http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/language/TTK[18].
- Totoro's Ethnologue language status is recorded as 9 Dormant[19].
Why It Matters
Totoro ranks in the top 5% of language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (6 views/month).[2] Totoro is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[20]