Hachijō dialects
0 sources
Hachijō dialects
Summary
Hachijō dialects is a Japanese dialect[1]. It ranks in the top 7% of japanese_dialect entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (495 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Hachijō dialects is in the country of Japan[3].
- Hachijō dialects's instance of is recorded as Japanese dialect[4].
- Hachijō dialects's instance of is recorded as natural language[5].
- Hachijō dialects's follows is recorded as Eastern Old Japanese[6].
- Hachijō dialects's ISO 639-6 code is recorded as hhjm[7].
- Hachijō dialects's subclass of is recorded as Japanese[8].
- Hachijō dialects's subclass of is recorded as Japonic[9].
- Hachijō dialects's writing system is recorded as kanji[10].
- Hachijō dialects's writing system is recorded as hiragana[11].
- Hachijō dialects's writing system is recorded as katakana[12].
- Hachijō dialects's Commons category is recorded as Hachijō language[13].
- Hachijō dialects's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0j3d_4p[14].
- Hachijō dialects's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Hachijō Japanese[15].
- Hachijō dialects's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Hachijō language[16].
- Hachijō dialects's Glottolog code is recorded as hach1238[17].
- Hachijō dialects's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '八丈方言'}[18].
- Hachijō dialects's endangeredlanguages.com ID is recorded as 10378[19].
- Hachijō dialects's indigenous to is recorded as Hachijō-jima[20].
- Hachijō dialects's indigenous to is recorded as Aogashima[21].
- Hachijō dialects's indigenous to is recorded as Hachijō-kojima[22].
- Hachijō dialects's indigenous to is recorded as Daitō Islands[23].
- Hachijō dialects's UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger ID is recorded as 1980[24].
- Hachijō dialects's dialect of is recorded as Japanese[25].
- Hachijō dialects's schematic is recorded as Hachijotree20100108.jpg[26].
Why It Matters
Hachijō dialects ranks in the top 7% of japanese_dialect entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (495 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[27] It is known by 21 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]