- Moldova Sign Language
- ISO 639-3 Code : vsiISO 639-2/B Code : -ISO 639-2/T Code : -ISO 639-1 Code : -Scope : IndividualLanguage Type : Living
Names of Languages ISO 639-3 . 2013.
Names of Languages ISO 639-3 . 2013.
Sign language — Two men and a woman signing. A sign language (also signed language) is a language which, instead of acoustically conveyed sound patterns, uses visually transmitted sign patterns (manual communication, body language) to convey meaning… … Wikipedia
Moldova — This article is about the modern state. For the principality, see Moldavia. For other uses, see Moldova (disambiguation). Republic of Moldova Republica Moldova … Wikipedia
Romanian language — Not to be confused with Romani language. Romanian, Daco Romanian română, limba română Pronunciation [roˈmɨnə] Spoken in By a majority … Wikipedia
Italian language — Italiano redirects here. For other uses, see Italiano (disambiguation). Italian Italiano, Lingua italiana or Idioma Italiano Pronunciation [itaˈljano] Spoken in … Wikipedia
Belarusian language — language name=Belarusian/Belorussian nativename=беларуская мова BGN/PCGN: byelaruskaya mova familycolor=Indo European states=Belarus, Poland, in 14 other countries speakers= 4 to 7 million rank=74 fam2=Balto Slavic fam3=Slavic fam4=East Slavic… … Wikipedia
History of Moldova — This article is part of a series Antiquity … Wikipedia
Ukrainian language — Infobox Language name=Ukrainian nativename=українська мова ukrayins ka mova pronunciation= [ukrɑˈjinʲsʲkɑ ˈmɔʋɑ] states=See article speakers=39 million|rank=26 Spoken in= Ukraine, Moldova, Vojvodina, USA, Brazil, Portugal. familycolor=Indo… … Wikipedia
Outline of Moldova — The … Wikipedia
Yiddish language — Not to be confused with Hebrew language. Yiddish ייִדיש yidish Pronunciation [ˈjɪdɪʃ] Spoken in United States, Israel, Argentina … Wikipedia
Dacian language — Dacian Spoken in Romania, northern Bulgaria, eastern Serbia; also (possibly): Moldova, SW Ukraine, eastern Hungary, southern Bulgaria, northern Greece, European Turkey, NW Anatolia (Turkey) Extinct probably by the 6th century AD … Wikipedia