Lines Matching refs:language

141 a language tag (see L<I18N::LangTags|I18N::LangTags>)
149 the language tag is syntactically valid and is for general use (like
161 Internet language tags, as defined in RFC 3066, are a formalism
162 for denoting human languages. The two-letter ISO 639-1 language
176 I<means> something different than a language tag. A language tag
177 denotes a language. A locale ID denotes a language I<as used in>
190 criterion for establishing when two language-forms are
196 are all the same tag, and denote the same language.
200 Not every language tag really refers to a single language. Some
201 language tags refer to conditions: i-default (system-message text
203 language). Others (notably lots of the three-letter codes) are
206 language that has been classed as Cushtic, but which has no more
215 distinct codes, as with language tag ja for Japanese, and
222 The first part of each item is the language tag, between
224 is followed by an English name for the language or language-group.
227 This list is in alphabetical order by English name of the language.
466 (Historical) NOT Chibchan (which is a language family).
560 where language-negotiation wasn't possible -- in SMTP mail failure
969 eq Judeo-Spanish. NOT Ladin (a minority language in Italy).
1034 eq the modern Slavic language spoken in what was Yugoslavia.
1101 eq the Irquoian language West Virginia Seneca. NOT New York Seneca!
1322 Large language group.
1646 Presumably the Philippine language Waray-Waray (SamareE<ntilde>o),
1647 not the smaller Philippine language Waray Sorsogon, nor the extinct
1648 Australian language Waray.
1660 "x-" is a prefix for language tags that are not registered with ISO