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Look up: Ga language

  1. Ga language
    The `Ga language` is a Kwa language spoken in Ghana, in and around the capital Accra. It has a phonemic distinction between 3 vowel lengths.
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ga_language

  2. Ga'anda language
    `Ga'anda`, also known as `Ganda`, `Ga'andu`, `Mokar`, and `Makwar`, is a Nigerian language spoken by about 10,000 people in the Adamawa state. Some speakers live in the Song, Gyuk, Mubi, and Biu (Borno State) LGAs. It is an Afro-Asiatic language, in the Biu-Mandara language family. It has 2 dialects, Ga'anda and Gabin. Its speakers are generally not monolingual in Ga'anda, instead, they use Hausa and Fulfulde as well. They are becoming more inter...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ga'anda_lan

  3. Gaagudju language
    `Gaagudju` (also spelt `Gagadu` and `Kakadu`) is an extinct Australian Aboriginal language formerly spoken in Arnhem Land, northern Australia, in the environs of Kakadu National Park. Its last speaker, Big Bill Neidjie, died on 23 May 2002.
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaagudju_la

  4. Gadaba language
    The `Gutob` or `Gadaba language` is a Munda language of India. Category:Languages of India
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gadaba_lang

  5. Gaddang Language
    The `Gaddang language` (also Gaddang or Cagayan ) is spoken by up to 30,000 speakers (the Gaddang people) in the Philippines, in the northeastern provinces of Nueva Vizcaya and Isabella and by overseas immigrants in countries located Asia, Australia, Canada, Europe, in the Middle East, UK and the U.S.A.. Most of the speakers can also speak Ilocano, the lingua franca of Northern Luzon. Gaddang is derived from . It is closely related to Ibanag, Ita...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaddang_Lan

  6. Gadsup language
    (from the article `Papuan languages`) ...class singular direct object6. Verbs also indicate tense, aspect, mood, and the direction and circumstances in which the action they designate is ...
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/g/2

  7. Gafat language
    The `Gafat language` is an extinct Semitic language that was once spoken along the Abbay River in Ethiopia. The records of this language are extremely sparse: a translation of the Song of Songs written in the 17th or 18th Century held at the Bodleian Library, and the reports of W. Leslau who visited the region in 1947 and after considerable work was able to find a total of four people who could still speak the language. Edward Ullendorff, in his ...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gafat_langu

  8. Gagauz language
    The `Gagauz language` (`Gagauz dili`) is a Turkic language, spoken by the Gagauz people, and the official language of Gagauzia, Republic of Moldova. It is spoken by approximately 150,000 people.
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gagauz_lang

  9. Gail language
    `Gail`, or `Gayle`, is an English and Afrikaans-based argot used primarily by English and Afrikaans-speaking gay men in urban communities of South Africa, and is similar in some respects to Polari in the United Kingdom, from which some lexical items have been borrowed. The equivalent language used by gay South African men who speak Bantu languages is called IsiNgqumo, and is based on a Nguni lexicon. Gail originally manifested as ``moffietaal`` ...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gail_langua

  10. Gajirrabeng language
    `Gajirrabeng` (also spelt `Gadjerawang`, `Gajirrawoong`, `Gadjerong`, `Gadyerong` and `Kajirrawung`) is an Australian Aboriginal language of the Kimberley region, today known by only three or four fluent speakers. As of 2004, there was no substantial information on the language (such as a grammar) available.
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gajirrabeng

  11. Galatian language
    `Galatian` is an extinct Celtic language once spoken in Galatia in Asia Minor (modern Turkey) from the 3rd century BC up to the 4th century AD. Of the language only a few glosses and brief comments in classical writers and scattered names on inscriptions survive. Altogether they add up to about 120 words, mostly personal names ending in `-riks` (cf. Gaulish `-rix/-reix`, Old Irish `ri`, Gothic language `-reiks`, Latin `rex`) `king`, some ending ...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galatian_la

  12. Galician Association of Language
    `Associaçom Galega da Língua` or `AGAL` (Galician for ``Galician Association of the Language``) is a reintegrationist collective formed in 1981 which seeks for full normalization of Galician, as a branch of Galician-Portuguese. Contrary to RAG, its Linguistics commission (or `Comissom Lingüística`) made its own rules in 1983, with the tittle of `Estudo crítico das normas ortográficas e morfolóxicas do idioma galego` (`Critical study of Galician l...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galician_As

  13. Galician language
    `Galician` (Galician: `galego`, ) is a language of the Western Ibero-Romance branch, spoken in Galicia, an autonomous community with the constitutional status of `historic nationality,` located in northwestern Spain and small bordering zones in neighbouring autonomous communities of Asturias and Castilla y León. Galician and Portuguese were, in medieval times, a single language which linguists call Galician-Portuguese, Medieval Galician, or Old...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galician_la

  14. Galician language
    Romance language with many similarities to the Portuguese language. It is spoken by some 4 million people, mostly in the autonomous community of ... [5 related articles]
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/g/4

  15. Galindian language
    `Galindian` is a poorly attested extinct language, considered to be a part of the Baltic languages group. There are no extant writings in Galindan. Category:Baltic languages Category:West Baltic languages Category:Medieval languages Category:Extinct Baltic languages bat-smg:Galindu kalba
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galindian_l

  16. Gallo language
    `Gallo` is a regional language of France. Gallo is a Romance language, one of the Oïl languages. It is spoken in Brittany and the west of France along the border with Normandy. Gallo was originally spoken in the March of Neustria which now corresponds to the border lands of Brittany and Normandy and its former heart in Le Mans, Maine. As an Oïl language it forms part of a dialect continuum which includes Norman, Picard and Poitevin-Saintongeais ...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallo_langu

  17. Galung language
    The `Galung language` is a distinct dialect of the Isan language of northeastern Thailand. One significant difference between the Galung language and other Isan or Lao dialects is that in place of the `ph` or `f` sound the Galung language uses a `p` sound. Category:Languages of Thailand Category:Isan Category:Tonal languages
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galung_lang

  18. Gambian Wolof language
    (from the article `Wolof language`) an Atlantic language of the Niger-Congo language family genetically related to Fula and Serer. There are two main variants of Wolof: Senegal Wolof, ...
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/g/6

  19. Game description language
    `Game Description Language`, or GDL, is a language designed by Michael Genesereth as part of the General Game Playing Project at Stanford University, California. GDL describes the state of a game as a series of facts, and the game mechanics as logical rules.
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_descri

  20. Game Maker Language
    `Game Maker Language` (`GML`) is an interpreted programming language developed for use with a computer game creation application called Game Maker. It was originally created by Mark Overmars to supplement the `drag-and-drop action` system used in Game Maker. However, in the latest versions, all the drag-and-drop actions translate to GML rather than being separate from it. GML is heavily integrated with the Game Maker environment. Usually, elemen...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_Maker_

  21. Gamilaraay language
    The `Gamilaraay` or `Kamilaroi` (see below for other spellings) language is a Pama-Nyungan language of the Wiradhuric subgroup found mostly in South East Australia. It was the traditional language of the Kamilaroi people, but is now moribund—according to Ethnologue, there were only 3 speakers left in 1997. However, there are thousands of people of mixed descent both within the native populations as well as immigrant populations, who identif...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamilaraay_

  22. Gamit language
    The `Gamit` language is a Central Indo-Aryan language belonging to the subgroup Bhil. Its ISO/DIS 639-3 code is `gbl`. It is spoken by approximately 400,000 people (2000) in Gujarat, mainly the area of Surat. It is mostly spoken by the Gamit caste; according to Ethnologue `most speakers have high school or college education`.
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamit_langu

  23. Gan language
    Chinese language of the Sino-Tibetan language family spoken primarily in Jiangxi province and the southeastern corner of Hubei province. According to ... [2 related articles]
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/g/7

  24. Ganda language
    (from the article `Benue-Congo languages`) ...Rwanda 8,000,000; Shona, Kongo, and Xhosa each 7,000,000; Luba 6,300,000; Rundi 6,000,000; and Kikuyu, Makua, Nyanja, Swahili, and Sukuma each ...
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/g/7

  25. Gapapaiwa language
    (from the article `Austronesian languages`) ...five). In the New Guinea area several Austronesian languages have radically restructured number systems that probably result from intensive ...
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/g/8


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25 November 2009

This day in history:
The Royal Suspension Chain Pier was opened on 25 November 1823 with a procession and firework display, but, to the disappointment of the town, without royalty being present. It proved an immediate success with both cross-channel travellers and also with promenaders who were charged an admission of two pence or one guinea annually. The pier also attracted many artists with its graceful outline, including Constable and Turner. read more

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