Pagkakaiba sa mga pagbabago kan "Tataramon na Ainu"

Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Linya 10:
| date = 2007
| ref = <ref>D. Bradley, "Languages of Mainland South-East Asia," in O. Miyaoka, O. Sakiyama, and M. E. Krauss (eds), ''The vanishing languages of the Pacific Rim'', Oxford: Oxford University Press (2007), pp. 301–336. .</ref>
| familycolor = suwayisolate
| family = [[suway na tataramon]]
| script = [[Katakana]] (sa ngunyan), [[Iskriturang Latin|Latin]] (currentsa ngunyan), [[CyrillicIskriturang scriptSiriliko|CyrillicSiriliko]] (RussiaRusya, obsolete)
| iso3 = ain
| image = Multilingual sign at Ainu Museum (Shiraoi).JPG
| map = Historical expanse of Ainu.png
|mapcaption=Historically attested range of the Ainu (solid red) and suspected former range (pink) based on toponymic evidence (red dots) [Vovin 1993], [[Matagi]] villages (purple dots), and [[Japanese dialects#Eastern Japanese|Japanese isoglosses]]
| imagecaption = MultilingualMultilingguwal signna insinyal sa [[JapaneseTataramon na languageHapones|JapaneseHapones]], Ainu, [[EnglishTataramon languagena Ingles|EnglishIngles]], [[KoreanTataramon languagena Koreano|KoreanKoreano]] andasin [[ChineseTataramon languagena Intsik|ChineseIntsik]]. AinuPanduwa ispoon thesa languageitaas secondkan downtoóng fromgilid thekan topsinyal onan the right side of the signAinu
| notice = IPA
| glotto = hokk1243