Difference between revisions of "Languages of the former Soviet Union"
		
		
		
		
		
		
		Jump to navigation
		Jump to search
		
				
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
Firespeaker (talk | contribs)  | 
				Firespeaker (talk | contribs)   | 
				||
| Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
* [[Tajik]]  | 
  * [[Tajik]]  | 
||
* [[Lithuanian]]  | 
  * [[Lithuanian]]  | 
||
| ⚫ | |||
See also [[Languages of the Volga-Kama region]] and [[Turkic languages]].  | 
  See also [[Languages of the Volga-Kama region]] and [[Turkic languages]].  | 
||
| Line 26: | Line 27: | ||
* [[Farsi]]  | 
  * [[Farsi]]  | 
||
* [[Polish]]  | 
  * [[Polish]]  | 
||
* [[Sámi languages]]  | 
|||
See also [[Balkan languages]].  | 
  See also [[Balkan languages]].  | 
||
| Line 33: | Line 35: | ||
* Tuvan  | 
  * Tuvan  | 
||
* Khakas  | 
  * Khakas  | 
||
| ⚫ | |||
* Buryat  | 
  * Buryat  | 
||
* Altay  | 
  * Altay  | 
||
[[Category:Languages of the former Soviet Union]]  | 
|||
Revision as of 04:52, 14 December 2012
A lot of work in apertium in recent years has been focused on languages of the former Soviet Union and some languages related to those.
Languages with Apertium projects
- Kyrgyz
 - Kazakh
 - Azeri
 - Turkmen
 - Tatar
 - Bashqort
 - Chuvash
 - Udmurt
 - Mari
 - Komi
 - Armenian
 - Estonian
 - Abkhaz
 - Tajik
 - Lithuanian
 - Sakha
 
See also Languages of the Volga-Kama region and Turkic languages.
Related Languages
See also Balkan languages.
Other languages we'd like to work on
- Kalmyk
 - Tuvan
 - Khakas
 - Buryat
 - Altay