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Language articles missing Glottolog code

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Moldovan
former name for the Romanian language in Moldova
British English
forms of the English language used in Britain
Brazilian Portuguese
set of varieties of the Portuguese language spoken in Brazil
Gallo
regional language of France
Basic English
English-based controlled language
Balhae
Balhae() or Parhae, also rendered as Bohai, was a multiethnic kingdom established in 698 by Dae Joyeong (대조영). It was called by Tang dynasty as the Kingdom of Jin (震, 진) until 713 when its name was officially declared as Parhae. At its greatest extent it corresponded to what is today Northeast China, the northern half of the Korean Peninsula and the southeastern Russian Far East.
Meskhetian (Turks)
ethnic group
Merya
extinct language
Spanglish
Spanglish (a blend of the words "Spanish" and "English") is any language variety (such as a contact dialect, hybrid language, pidgin, or creole language) that results from conversationally combining Spanish and English. The term is mostly used in the United States and in Puerto Rico. It refers to a blend of the words and grammar of Spanish and English. More narrowly, Spanglish can specifically mean a variety of Spanish with heavy use of English loanwords.
Scottish English
varieties of English spoken in Scotland
varieties of Arabic
family of language varieties
received pronunciation
standard accent for British English
Simlish
Simlish is a constructed language devised by game designer Will Wright for the Sims game series developed by Electronic Arts. During the development of SimCopter (1996), Wright sought to avoid real-world languages, believing that players would grow to show disdain for repetitive dialogue. For the release of The Sims, Maxis recorded hundreds of voice clips with unique cadences and emotional nuance.
Apabhraṃśa
Apabhraṃśa (, , Prakrit: ) is a term used by vaiyākaraṇāḥ (native grammarians) since Patañjali to refer to languages spoken in Northern India before the rise of the modern languages. In Indology, it is used as an umbrella term for the dialects forming the transition between the late Middle and the early Modern Indo-Aryan languages, spanning the period between the 6th and 13th centuries CE. However, these dialects are conventionally included in the Middle Indo-Aryan period. wikt:अपभ्रंश#Sanskrit| in Sanskrit literally means "corrupt" or "non-grammatical language", that which deviates from the n
Muromian
extinct language formerly spoken by the Muromian tribe
Meshcherian
extinct language in Russia territory
Llanito
Llanito or Yanito () is a form of Andalusian Spanish heavily laced with words from English and other languages, such as Ligurian; it is spoken in the British overseas territory of Gibraltar. It is commonly marked by a great deal of code switching between Andalusian Spanish and British English and by the use of Anglicisms and loanwords from other Mediterranean languages and dialects.
Swiss French
dialect of French spoken in Switzerland
Azerbaijani Sign Language
language used by the deaf community in Azerbaijan
Tasmanian
extinct group of languages indigenous to the island of Tasmania, Australia
Homeric Greek
form of the Greek language that was used by Homer
Neo-Latin
Neo-Latin (also known as New Latin and Modern Latin) is the style of written Latin used in original literary, scholarly, and scientific works, first in Italy during the Italian Renaissance of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, and then across northern Europe after about 1500, as a key feature of the humanist movement. Through comparison with Latin of the Classical period, scholars from Petrarch onwards promoted a standard of Latin closer to that of the ancient Romans, especially in grammar, style, and spelling. The term Neo-Latin was however coined much later, probably in Germany in the l
Belgian French
dialect of the French language spoken in Belgium
African French
generic name of the varieties of the French language in the African continent
Balearic
dialects of Catalan in the Balearic islands
Western Qin
Sixteen Kingdoms dynastic Chinese state (385–400; 409–431)
Pomeranian
language
Tamna
Tamna () was a kingdom based on Jeju Island from ancient times until it was absorbed by the Korean Joseon dynasty in 1404, following a long period of being a tributary state or autonomous administrative region of various Korean kingdoms.
Slavonic-Serbian
Slavonic-Serbian (славяносербскій, slavjanoserbskij), also known as Slavo-Serbian or Slaveno-Serbian (славено-сербскiй, slaveno-serbskij; , slavenosrpski), was a literary language used by the Serbs in the Habsburg Empire, mostly in what is now Vojvodina, from the mid-18th century to the first decades of the 19th century, falling into obscurity by the 1870s. It was a linguistic blend of Church Slavonic of the Russian recension, vernacular Serbian (Shtokavian dialect), and Church Slavonic of the Serbian recension, with varying sources and differing attempts at standardisation.
Globish (Nerrière)
subset of standard English grammar and a list of 1500 English words
Kalašma
extinct Anatolic language
Khortha
Indo-Aryan dialect
Haketia
Haketia ( Ḥakkītīyā; al-Ḥakītiya; ) (also written as Hakitia or Haquitía) is an endangered Jewish Romance language also known as Djudeo Spañol, Ladino Occidental, or Western Judaeo-Spanish. It was historically spoken by the North African Sephardim in the Moroccan cities of Tétouan, Tangier, Asilah, Larache, Chefchaouen, Ksar el-Kebir, and the Spanish towns of Ceuta and Melilla. Tetuani Ladino was also spoken in Oran, Algeria. One of the distinctions between Ladino and Haketia (Haquetia) is that the latter incorporates Moroccan Arabic.
South Franconian German
dialect
Geordie
Geordie ( ) is a demonym and vernacular dialect characterising Newcastle upon Tyne and the wider Tyneside area of North East England.
North Korean standard language
North Korean standard version of the Korean language
Zaum
'''''' () are the linguistic experiments in sound symbolism and language creation of Russian Cubo-Futurist poets such as Velimir Khlebnikov and Aleksei Kruchenykh. Zaum is a non-referential phonetic entity with its own ontology. The language consists of neologisms that mean nothing. Zaum is a language organized through phonetic analogy and rhythm. Zaum literature cannot contain any onomatopoeia or psychopathological states.
Hantec slang
variety of Czech spoken in Brno
George Psalmanazar
French writer (1679–1763)
Classical Japanese
literary form of the Japanese language, standard until WW2, based on Heian-period Early Middle Japanese with later influences
Czechoslovak
political sociolinguistic concept used in Czechoslovakia in 1920–1938 for the definition of the state language of the country
Old Tatar
literary language used among the some ethnic groups of Volga-Ural region (Tatars, Bashkirs and others) from the Middle Ages till the 19th century
Malay trade and creole languages
languages descended from Low Malay
Standard Algerian Berber
language
Tabarchino
Tabarchino or Tabarkino () is a dialect of the Ligurian language spoken in Sardinia.
Syrian Arabic
Syrian dialect of Arabic language
Mentonasc
transitional dialect between the Occitan language and the Ligurian language
Old Norman
historical language spoken in northern France
Dryopes
Dryopes (; ) or Dryopians () were one of the aboriginal tribes of ancient Greece. According to Herodotus, their earliest abode is said to have been on Mount Oeta in Central Greece and its adjacent valleys, in the district called after them, Dryopis (Δρυοπίς). The Dorians settled in that part of their country which lay between Oeta and Mount Parnassus, and which was afterwards called Doris; but Dryopis originally extended as far north as the river Spercheios. The name of Dryopis was still applied to the latter district in the time of Strabo, who calls it a tetrapolis, like Doris.
International English
English language as a global means of communication in numerous dialects
Indo-Persian
variety of Persian as used in the Indian subcontinent
Pannonian Romance
an extinct Latin Language
LoCos
LoCoS (short for Lovers Communication System) is a pictorial language developed by Yukio Ota of Japan in 1964. It was meant as communication for the deaf and mute as well as for the illiterate. It is a universal and simple language, and as Ota put it, "It should emphasize the importance of communication among all the people of all the countries of the world."
Taglish
thumb|A short interview with Metro Manila|Manilan singer and actress [[Sarah Geronimo in Taglish]]
English language in England
dialects of British English from England
Northern Catalan
dialect of Catalan spoken in Roussillon, France
Teschen Silesian
Silesian dialect spoken across the Polish-Czech border
West Saxon
dialect of Old English
Jersey Dutch
Dutch dialect spoken in New Jersey
Yazoo people
tribe of the Native American Tunica people