Template:Wiktionary
Wiktionary – the free dictionary — a portmanteau of 'wiki' and 'dictionary' – is a series of free open content collaborative wiki dictionaries that anyone can edit. A major linguistic edition 'project' of the Wikimedia Foundation (WMF), the first Wiktionary, the English language version, was founded December 2002 by Brion Vibber. March 2004 saw the arrival of French and Polish versions, and May 2004 saw the activation of Wiktionary wikis by Tim Starling in all languages as existing Wikipedias. All language versions started as a wiki dictionary with multilingual definitions, etymologies, pronunciations, sample quotations, synonyms, antonyms, and translations. They expanded to include a thesaurus sub-project, rhyme guides, phrase books, language statistics, and comprehensive appendices. Wiktionary is the lexical companion to the open-content encyclopaedia Wikipedia.
All Wiktionary wikis have their content released under a dual-license; those being the initial GNU Free Documentation License version 1.1 (or later) (GFDL or GNU FDL v1.1+), and the subsequent addition Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA 3.0).[1]
- www.Wiktionary.org — Wiktionary portal to all language versions
- Wiktionary — Meta.Wikimedia.org at Wikimedia Meta-Wiki
- Wiktionary – special projects subcommittees — Meta.Wikimedia.org at Wikimedia Meta-Wiki
- Wiktionary Statistics – site map — Wikistats v1 (public domain) (final release, 31 January 2019) from Erik Zachte, Stats.Wikimedia.org at Wikimedia Statistics
- Wiktionary Statistics – All Wiktionaries — Wikistats v2 (Creative Commons CC0), Stats.Wikimedia.org at Wikimedia Statistics
- WikiStats – List of Wiktionaries — WikiStats.WMCloud.org at Wikistats 2.2 – MediaWiki statistics, hosted by Wikimedia Cloud Services (WMCS)
- Wikiscan Wiktionary statistics — independent statistics site on Wikipedia and other wikis hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation, at Wikiscan.org
- Wiktionary Interactive Statistics — from Martin Poljak at Wikistatistics.net (public domain), via Archive.org from 2015
- List of Wiktionaries — from WikiStats by S23.org
- Wiktionary database list — NOC.Wikimedia.org at Wikimedia NOC
- Wiktionary-l — mailing list for Wiktionary, at Lists.Wikimedia.org
- Wiktionary — at the English Wikipedia
- Wiktionary.org site info — from Alexa.com
- Twitter feed for Wiktionary
- Wiktionary at Everything2.com — a personal commentary by AxelBoldt
- All Wiktionary wikis in these languages: (view / edit)
As of April 2021, Wikimedia Meta-Wiki indicates that there are versions of the Wiktionary in 182 different languages (more than 100 less than the number of Wikipedias), although notably less are considered fairly active.
1,000,000+:
English (en) •
French (fr) •
Malagasy (mg) •
Russian (ru)
100,000+:
Catalan (ca) •
Czech (cs) •
German (de) •
Greek (el) •
Esperanto (eo) •
Spanish (es) •
Estonian (et) •
Persian (fa) •
Finnish (fi) •
Hindi (hi) •
Hungarian (hu) •
Armenian (hy) •
Indonesian (id) •
Ido (io) •
Italian (it) •
Japanese (ja) •
Kannada (kn) •
Korean (ko) •
Kurdish (ku) •
Limburgish (li) •
Lithuanian (lt) •
Malayalam (ml) •
Burmese (my) •
Dutch (nl) •
Norwegian (Bokmål) (no) •
Oriya (or) •
Polish (pl) •
Portuguese (pt) •
Romanian (ro) •
Serbo-Croatian (sh) •
Serbian (sr) •
Swedish (sv) •
Tamil (ta) •
Telugu (te) •
Thai (th) •
Turkish (tr) •
Uzbek (uz) •
Vietnamese (vi) •
Chinese (zh)
10,000+:
Afrikaans (af) •
Arabic (ar) •
Asturian (ast) •
Azerbaijani (az) •
Bulgarian (bg) •
Bengali (bn) •
Breton (br) •
Welsh (cy) •
Danish (da) •
Basque (eu) •
Fijian (fj) •
West Frisian (fy) •
Galician (gl) •
Hebrew (he) •
Croatian (hr) •
Icelandic (is) •
Javanese (jv) •
Georgian (ka) •
Kirghiz (ky) •
Latin (la) •
Lao (lo) •
Latvian (lv) •
Norwegian (Nynorsk) (nn) •
Occitan (oc) •
Panjabi (pa) •
Pashto (ps) •
Sicilian (scn) •
Shan (shn) •
Simple English (simple) •
Slovak (sk) •
Saraiki (skr) •
Slovenian (sl) •
Albanian (sq) •
Swahili (sw) •
Tajik (tg) •
Tagalog (tl) •
Ukrainian (uk) •
Urdu (ur) •
Volapük (vo) •
Walloon (wa) •
Min Nan (zh-min-nan)
1,000+:
Aragonese (an) •
Anglo-Saxon (ang) •
Aymara (ay) •
Central Bicolano (bcl) •
Belarusian (be) •
Bosnian (bs) •
Corsican (co) •
Kashubian (csb) •
Zazaki (diq) •
Faroese (fo) •
Irish (ga) •
Scottish Gaelic (gd) •
Guarani (gn) •
Goan Konkani (gom) •
Fiji Hindi (hif) •
Upper Sorbian (hsb) •
Interlingua (ia) •
Interlingue (ie) •
Kazakh (kk) •
Greenlandic (kl) •
Cambodian (km) •
Luxembourgish (lb) •
Maori (mi) •
Minangkabau (min) •
Macedonian (mk) •
Mongolian (mn) •
Meitei (mni) •
Marathi (mr) •
Malay (ms) •
Maltese (mt) •
Nahuatl (nah) •
Low Saxon (nds) •
Nias (nia) •
Oromo (om) •
Western Panjabi (pnb) •
Aromanian (roa-rup) •
Sanskrit (sa) •
Sindhi (sd) •
Shawiya (shy) •
Sinhalese (si) •
Samoan (sm) •
Somali (so) •
Southern Sotho (st) •
Sundanese (su) •
Turkmen (tk) •
Tatar (tt) •
Uyghur (ug) •
Venetian (vec) •
Wolof (wo) •
Cantonese (yue) •
Zulu (zu)
100+:
Amharic (am) •
Cherokee (chr) •
Divehi (dv) •
Gujarati (gu) •
Manx (gv) •
Hausa (ha) •
Inupiak (ik) •
Inuktitut (iu) •
Lojban (jbo) •
Kashmiri (ks) •
Cornish (kw) •
Lingala (ln) •
Mon (mnw) •
Nauruan (na) •
Nepali (ne) •
Quechua (qu) •
Rwandi (rw) •
Sango (sg) •
Swati (ss) •
Tigrinya (ti) •
Setswana (tn) •
Tok Pisin (tpi) •
Tsonga (ts) •
Yiddish (yi) •
Zhuang (za)
10+:
Assamese (as)
1+:
Pali (pi)
0:
Afar (aa) •
Abkhazian (ab) •
Akan (ak) •
Avar (av) •
Bihari (bh) •
Bislama (bi) •
Bambara (bm) •
Tibetan (bo) •
Chamorro (ch) •
Cree (cr) •
Dzongkha (dz) •
Marshallese (mh) •
Raeto Romance (rm) •
Kirundi (rn) •
Sardinian (sc) •
Shona (sn) •
Tongan (to) •
Twi (tw) •
Xhosa (xh) •
Yoruba (yo)
other:
Alemannic (als, redirects to Alemannic Wikipedia) •
Moldovan (mo, redirects to ro)
- The red links above need the {{Wiki}} infobox template, their Wiktionary URLs, the {{Wikimedia-stub}} template, and the {{Wiktionary}} navigation template added.
To not include articles which use this template in the category: Wiktionary, type (or copy and paste) {{Wiktionary|cat=no}}
as a parameter before }}