Chesko-gí
Guā-māu
(Tùi Czech Gú choán--lâi)
Czech | |
---|---|
čeština, český jazyk | |
Goân-chū kok-ka | Czech Republic |
Bîn-cho̍k | Czechs |
bú-gí sú-iōng-chiá | 10.7 million (2015)[1] |
Gí-hē | |
Hong-giân | |
Bûn-jī hē-thóng | |
Koaⁿ-hong tē-ūi | |
Koaⁿ-hong gí-giân | |
Sêng-jīn ê chió-sò͘ gí-giân | |
Koán-lí ki-kò͘ |
Institute of the Czech Language (of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic) |
Gí-giân tāi-bé | |
ISO 639-1 |
cs |
ISO 639-2 |
cze (B) ces (T) |
ISO 639-3 |
ces |
Glottolog |
czec1258 |
Linguasphere |
53-AAA-da < 53-AAA-b...-d |
IETF |
cs[4] |
Chesko-gí (čeština, ho͘-im: [ˈt͡ʃɛʃcɪna]) sī chi̍t khoán Slav gí-giân, ū tāi-iok 12,000,000 ê chāi-tē sú-iōng-chiá, sī Chesko kap Chesko-lâng ê chú-iàu gí-giân.
Chesko-gí kap Slovakia-gí ē-sái sio-thong, kap Pho-lân-gí mā ū chi̍t-kóa sio-siâng.
Tsù-kái
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]- ↑ Czech at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 "Full list". Council of Europe.
- ↑ Ministry of Interior of Poland: Act of 6 January 2005 on national and ethnic minorities and on the regional languages
- ↑ IANA language subtag registry, retrieved October 15, 2018