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The phenomenon of Para-Romani languages is akin to Jewish languages (other than Hebrew) which are spoken by different communities of the Jewish diaspora and are heavily influenced by Hebrew, such as Yiddish (Judaeo-German) among Ashkenazi Jews, Ladino (Judaeo-Spanish) among Sephardic Jews, or Yevanic (Judaeo-Greek), Italkian (Judaeo-Italian ...
Thinker78 (talk · contribs) — Near-native English, native Spanish (Guatemala), translator without certification. I can help in verifying a translation, translating up to a paragraph or two mostly, not entire articles. Active since 2020 or before. Magnolia1771 (talk · contribs) - Native Spanish (Spain), near-native English; Active in 2020
The Portuguese Wikipedia (Portuguese: Wikipédia em português) is the Portuguese-language edition of Wikipedia (written Wikipédia, in Portuguese), the free encyclopedia. It was started on 11 May 2001. [2] Wikipedia is the nineteenth most accessed website in Brazil [3] and the tenth most accessed in Portugal. [4]
Wikipedia:Translation - How-to - Available translators - Featured Articles - All translation sub-pages - Intertranswiki Project Translations from : Arabic - Chinese - Dutch - French - German - Italian - Japanese - Swedish - Polish - Spanish - Portuguese - Russian - All supported languages
Pages in category "Articles needing translation from Portuguese Wikipedia" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 517 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Each Wikipedia project has a code, which is used as a subdomain of wikipedia.org. The codes mostly conform to ISO 639-1 two-letter codes or ISO 639-3 three-letter codes, with preference given to a two-letter code if available. [14] For example, en stands for English in ISO 639-1, so the English Wikipedia is at en.wikipedia.org.
The Romanian Wikipedia (abr. ro.wiki or ro.wp; [1] Romanian: Wikipedia în limba română) is the Romanian language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.Started on 12 July 2003, as of 17 February 2025 this edition has 510,743 articles and is the 30th largest Wikipedia edition. [2]
The Romani people in Portugal, known in spoken Portuguese as ciganos (Portuguese pronunciation: [siˈɣɐnuʃ]), but also alternatively known as calés, calós, and boémios, are a minority ethnic group.