Tuesday, March 22, 2005

Ethnologue: the book


Ethnologue Posted by Hello

We've been waiting for this day for a while now; the 15th edition of the Ethnologue - Languages of the World was unveiled today. We had a little ceremony where everyone whose name was on the credits' page was given their own copy. Gary's title in this effort is Executive Editor. That means he didn't do the nit-picking work of gathering the data about the languages of the world, but he did have the Herculean task of getting all those people to work together to end up with a professional product. And his job isn't over yet; in a couple weeks I hope to have another blog entry called Ethnologue: the website.


Here are some of the facts in and about the Ethnologue:
  • The book weighs nearly 5 pounds, has 1272 pages, and is hard-bound.
  • It is printed on acid-free, thin yet opaque paper.
  • It includes 208 color language maps.
  • It is an encyclopedic reference volume cataloguing all of the world's 6,912 known languages.
  • It includes population estimates for each of those language groups.
  • It gives alternate names and dialect names.
  • It gives information about multilingualism, availability of literature, geographic and other information about each language.
  • It includes statistical summaries by world area, language size, and language family.
  • It gives a genetic classification of each language (that is, how it is related to other language).
And here are some things that the Ethnologue isn't:
  • perfect - although more than 50,000 updates and corrections have been made since the 14th edition, the editors have no illusion that it is complete nor entirely correct. In the informative introduction there are instructions on how to send in corrections.
  • finished - The total number of languages is 103 more than in the 14th edition. This is not because 103 languages have just been found, but rather had been previously considered dialects of another language. Language is constantly changing, so the Ethnologue will continue to catalogue those changes.
  • a one-man job - As you might imagine, this massive amount of detail has been collected from many, many sources and it has taken the work of many people to organize, verify, and present the data.
One more item of note: The Ethnologue is the first major publication to make use of ISO/DIS 639-3 -- the new, comprehensive draft international standard for three-letter identifiers. The previous standard had about 400; now it has 7000 so every language in the word can be identified uniquely.

This big, fat book costs about $80. Mostly it will be linguists and academic libraries buying the book because SIL International puts the whole thing for free on the web. The website for the 15th edition is coming soon.

Thank the Lord with us for this reference volume that will be used by missionaries of many stripes, as well as academics.



Gary with his copy Posted by Hello

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