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The Bosnian Wikipedia (Bosnian: Wikipedia na bosanskom jeziku) is the Bosnian language version of Wikipedia, hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation. As of 19 December 2024, it has 94,158 articles. It was created on 12 December 2002, and its first article was Matematika. [1]
They named their new community "Logan" for Ephraim Logan, an early fur trapper in the area. [1] Logan was incorporated on January 17, 1866. [ 8 ] Brigham Young College was founded here on August 6, 1877 (and closed in 1926), [ 9 ] and Utah State University , then called the Agricultural College of Utah, was founded in 1888.
As of 31 March 2011, the estimated total number of Internet users was 2.095 billion (30% of world population). [61] It is estimated that in 1993 the Internet carried only 1% of the information flowing through two-way telecommunication. By 2000 this figure had grown to 51%, and by 2007 more than 97% of all telecommunicated information was ...
North Logan is a city in Cache County, Utah, United States. The population was 10,986 at the 2020 census. It is included in the Logan, Utah-Idaho (partial) Metropolitan Statistical Area. The city is mainly composed of residential sub-divisions and is a suburb of the county seat, Logan.
The Logan Metropolitan Statistical Area, as defined by the United States Census Bureau, consists of two counties – one in Utah and one in Idaho, anchored by the city of Logan. As of the 2010 census , the MSA had a population of 125,442 (the Census Bureau estimate for July 1, 2014 placed the population at 131,364). [ 1 ]
Bosnian (/ ˈ b ɒ z n i ə n / ⓘ; bosanski / босански; [bɔ̌sanskiː]), sometimes referred to as Bosniak (bošnjački / бошњачки; [bǒʃɲaːtʃkiː]), [5] [6] is the standardized variety of the Serbo-Croatian pluricentric language mainly used by ethnic Bosniaks.
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 ]
Three out of four standard variants have the same set of 30 regular phonemes, so the Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian Latin and Serbian Cyrillic alphabets map one to one with one another and with the phoneme inventory, while Montenegrin alphabet has 32 regular phonemes, the additional two being Ś and Ź .