Number of Article Milestones
Milestone | Languages (dates milestones reached, in order of reaching them) |
---|---|
2,000,000 | English (9 September 2007) |
1,000,000 | German (27 December 2009); French (21 September 2010); Dutch (17 December 2011) |
500,000 | Polish (14 May 2008); Japanese (25 June 2008); Italian (3 October 2008); Spanish (5 August 2009); Portuguese (12 August 2009); Russian (25 February 2010); Chinese (14 July 2012); Swedish (27 September 2012); Vietnamese (28 September 2012) |
200,000 | Norwegian (Bokmål) (13 December 2008); Finnish (12 April 2009); Catalan (21 September 2009); Ukrainian (7 April 2010); Czech (6 July 2011); Hungarian (10 September 2011); Korean (19 May 2012); Persian (9 July 2012); Romanian (5 August 2012); Arabic (21 October 2012); Indonesian (26 October 2012) |
100,000 | Volapük (7 September 2007); Turkish (3 February 2008); Esperanto (15 June 2008); Slovak (27 August 2008); Danish (29 December 2008); Serbian (20 November 2009); Hebrew (10 January 2010); Lithuanian (18 January 2010); Bulgarian (23 May 2010); Slovene (15 August 2010); Waray-Waray (24 August 2010); Malay (9 January 2011); Basque (21 May 2011); Croatian (7 July 2011); Hindi (30 August 2011); Kazakh (26 October 2011); Estonian (25 August 2012) |
50,000 | Haitian (12 August 2008); Simple English (6 January 2009); Newar / Nepal Bhasa (15 April 2009); Norwegian (Nynorsk) (9 July 2009); Galician (23 July 2009); Thai (4 September 2009); Greek (10 April 2010); Aromanian (4 July 2010); Azeri (13 January 2011); Tagalog (15 January 2011); Latin (11 February 2011); Georgian (7 July 2011); Macedonian (2 October 2011); Occitan (30 October 2011); Serbo-Croatian (8 November 2011); Piedmontese (31 December 2011); Telugu (13 March 2012); Belarusian (15 September 2012); Uzbek (8 November 2012) |
20,000 | Cebuano (2 February 2007); Bishnupriya Manipuri (16 August 2007); Bosnian (30 August 2007); Luxembourgish (2 February 2008); Icelandic (15 February 2008); Albanian (19 April 2008); Breton (20 June 2008); Marathi (22 September 2008); Welsh (20 November 2008); Latvian (13 February 2009); Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa) (17 June 2009); Bengali (28 June 2009); Javanese (13 July 2009); Tamil (22 November 2009); Aragonese (4 April 2010); Swahili (21 August 2010); Ido (23 August 2010); Lombard (14 April 2011); West Frisian (22 May 2011); Gujarati (1 June 2011); Yoruba (3 July 2011); Malagasy (16 July 2011); Malayalam (5 September 2011); Western Panjabi (6 September 2011); Afrikaans (11 November 2011); Armenian (15 January 2012); Nepali (7 May 2012); Cantonese (18 May 2012); Burmese (23 July 2012); Sicilian (27 October 2012); Urdu (28 October 2012); Bashkir (31 October 2012) |
10,000 | Neapolitan (20 June 2006); Sundanese (13 April 2007); Low Saxon (2 July 2007); Kurdish (19 September 2007); Asturian (20 November 2007); Walloon (20 March 2008); Quechua (13 March 2009); Chuvash (7 April 2009); Samogitian (7 April 2009); Irish (20 February 2010); Kannada (14 January 2011); Amharic (27 May 2011); Zazaki (21 June 2011); Alemannic (22 June 2011); Tatar (8 July 2011); Buginese (8 November 2011); Interlingua (5 December 2011); Banyumasan (10 January 2012); Tajik (23 April 2012); Scottish Gaelic (17 May 2012); Sorani (3 August 2012); Min Nan (24 August 2012); Scots (30 August 2012); Mazandarani (30 August 2012); Kyrgyz (14 September 2012); Fiji Hindi (11 November 2012) |
5,000 | Corsican (22 December 2006); Venetian (3 July 2007); Tarantino (2 August 2007); Maori (10 September 2007); Kapampangan (1 April 2008); Yiddish (5 May 2008); Upper Sorbian (24 July 2008); Nahuatl (5 September 2008); Gilaki (30 April 2009); Limburgish (3 October 2009); Sakha (10 October 2009); Ossetian (24 February 2010); Egyptian Arabic (7 March 2010); Gan (29 March 2010); Mongolian (10 September 2010); Central Bicolano (21 April 2011); Faroese (13 July 2011); Hill Mari (4 August 2011); Sanskrit (5 August 2011); Sinhalese (22 August 2011); Tibetan (14 December 2011); Bavarian (25 December 2011); Ilokano (19 April 2012); Northern Sami (1 July 2012); Dutch Low Saxon (12 September 2012); Voro (7 October 2012) |
2,000 | Norman (14 November 2006); Friulian (22 April 2007); Bhojpuri/Bihari (29 April 2007); Novial (20 May 2007); Pali (7 June 2007); Pangasinan (8 July 2007); West Flemish (27 August 2007); Ligurian (2 November 2007); Divehi (28 December 2007); Romansh (29 January 2008); Classical Chinese (26 April 2008); Franco-Provençal/Arpitan (2 May 2008); Maltese (5 May 2008); Wu (5 September 2008); Manx (17 November 2008); Khmer (27 November 2008); Turkmen (19 April 2009); Kashubian (4 June 2009); Uyghur (17 June 2009); Ladino (3 July 2009); Ripuarian (5 November 2009); Sardinian (5 December 2009); Anglo-Saxon (5 April 2010); Hakka (15 August 2010); Cornish (15 November 2010); Pashto (25 November 2010); Rusyn/Ruthenian (11 March 2011); Meadow Mari (13 April 2011); Udmurt (21 April 2011); Komi (16 May 2011); Navajo (18 May 2011); Komi-Permyak (11 June 2011); Somali (13 June 2011); Punjabi (25 August 2011); Saterland Frisian (3 December 2011); Extremaduran (27 December 2011); Silesian (30 December 2011); Zeelandic (16 January 2012); Oriya (17 January 2012); Mingrelian (22 February 2012); Aymara (1 April 2012); North Frisian (12 May 2012); Picard (10 June 2012); Gagauz (1 September 2012); Veps (19 September 2012); Guarani (5 November 2012) |
1,000 | Pennsylvania German (16 October 2006); Tongan (25 April 2007); Lingala (1 December 2007); Hawaiian (9 February 2008); Interlingue (31 May 2008); Erzya (16 July 2009); Lojban (26 August 2009); Wolof (27 August 2009); Crimean Tatar (21 October 2009); Assyrian Neo-Aramaic (21 October 2009); Acehnese (17 December 2009); Karachay-Balkar (25 April 2010); Kalmyk (8 May 2010); Emiliano-Romagnolo (2 July 2010); Banjar (30 November 2010); Greenlandic (8 December 2010); Papiamentu (12 December 2010); Chechen (8 January 2011); Kinyarwanda (10 January 2011); Tok Pisin (5 March 2011); Palatinate German (6 June 2011); Lak (24 July 2011); Moksha (30 July 2011); Avar (10 September 2011); Assamese (7 January 2012); Lower Sorbian (28 January 2012); Kabyle (18 February 2012); Shona (8 June 2012); Sranan (26 August 2012); Zamboanga Chavacano (29 September 2012); Lezgian (21 October 2012); Russian Buryat (21 November 2012) |
edit
Read more about this topic: Wikipedia:Multilingual Statistics
Famous quotes containing the words number of, number and/or article:
“I heartily wish you, in the plain home-spun style, a great number of happy new years, well employed in forming both your mind and your manners, to be useful and agreeable to yourself, your country, and your friends.”
—Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl Chesterfield (16941773)
“In many ways, life becomes simpler [for young adults]. . . . We are expected to solve only a finite number of problems within a limited range of possible solutions. . . . Its a mental vacation compared with figuring out who we are, what we believe, what were going to do with our talents, how were going to solve the social problems of the globe . . .and what the perfect way to raise our children will be.”
—Roger Gould (20th century)
“I review novels to make money, because it is easier for a sluggard to write an article a fortnight than a book a year, because the writer is soothed by the opiate of action, the crank by posing as a good journalist, and having an airhole. I dislike it. I do it and I am always resolving to give it up.”
—Cyril Connolly (19031974)