Medžuviki: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 11:23, 17 January 2022

https://Upload.Wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/79/Rename_icon.svg/48px-Rename_icon.svg.png   It is requested that this Medžuviki article, template, or category be renamed to [[::Medžuviki|Medžuviki]]; because Actual wiki name, not the URL abbreviation. Please discuss.
A square image with a graduated pale brown background, containing the words 'Please Upload Logo' in black text. Medžuviki
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About
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Status: Active
Language: Interslavic
Edit mode: OpenEdit
Wiki engine: MediaWiki
Wiki license: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike"Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike" is not in the list (Custom license, Attribution to contributing authors, Copyright to contributing authors, Site retains copyright, WTFPL, Licence Art Libre, Open Content License, Apache License, BSD Documentation License, FreeBSD Documentation License, ...) of allowed values for the "Wiki license" property.
Main topic: Constructed languages
Wiki size: 262 article pages see stats

(Page count as of: 2021-10-16)

Medžuviki is a resource and open encyclopedia written in the zonal auxiliary language of Interslavic (medžuslovjansky). The wiki has its origins and is a joint of two separate wikis and three precursor Interslavic language projects (slovianski, slovioski, novoslověnsky), the first founded on 18 June 2006 by Gabriel Sloboda and the second in December 2009 by Jan van Steenbergen, formerly hosted on Wikinet[1] and Orain[2] and since May 2017 on Miraheze.

Description

Main page: Wikipedia:Interslavic

The wiki is based on the style of various interlanguage Wikipedias, particularly inspired by the Lingua Franca Nova, another constructed language which was granted its own ISO 639 code. Its aim is to write articles vital for any Wikipedia project, as well as the Interslavic language itself.

Medžuviki is written in both Latin and Cyrillic script, since Interslavic treates languages of Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Polish, Czech, Slovak, Slovenian, Serbo-Croatian (Croatian, Serbian, Montenegrin and Bosnian), Bulgarian and Macedonian equally.

References