This is a concept for how our very longest entries (the lowercase vowels and a handful of other common consonant+vowel two-letter words) could be split.

  • The entry would be split into subpages.
    • Language names are used as the basis for the split to make things as easy as possible for our readers.
    • The main entry, a in this example, would contain an index box, like what you see below on this page, as well as the Translingual and English entries.
  • The split of languages into subpages would be consistent across all the split entries so that the linking templates, like {{l}}, can automatically link to the correct language subpage.
    • In this example, the split is three-way: languages A-H, languages I-N and languages O-Z.
    • A template such as {{l|pt|a}} would look up an internal Lua list to discover that "a" is a split entry, and would then link to "a/languages O-Z".

This entry is split across several pages.

Translingual
English
This page (a)

Abau
Afar
Albanian
Ama
Anguthimri
Aragonese
Asturian
Azerbaijani
Bambara
Basque
Bavarian
Belizean Creole
Big Nambas
Cameroon Pidgin
Catalan
Chayuco Mixtec
Chibcha
Choctaw
Chuukese
Cimbrian
Coatepec Nahuatl
Cornish
Corsican
Czech
Dakota
Dalmatian
Danish
Dutch
Egyptian
Emilian
Esperanto
Estonian
Fala
Faroese
Finnish
French
Fula
Galician
German
Gilbertese
Gothic
Grass Koiari
Gun
Haitian Creole
Hawaiian
Hungarian
⇒ a/languages A–H

Icelandic
Ido
Igbo
Indo-Portuguese
Indonesian
Ingrian
Interlingua
Inupiaq
Irish
Istriot
Italian
Japanese
Jersey Dutch
K'iche'
Kabuverdianu
Kabyle
Kalasha
Kapampangan
Kashubian
Kayan
Koitabu
Krisa
Ladin
Lashi
Latgalian
Latin
Latvian
Laz
Ligurian
Livonian
Louisiana Creole
Lower Sorbian
Lushootseed
Malay
Maltese
Mandarin
Mandinka
Maori
Mezquital Otomi
Middle Dutch
Middle English
Middle French
Middle Welsh
Min Nan
Mòcheno
Mopan Maya
Mountain Koiari
Murui Huitoto
Nauruan
Navajo
Neapolitan
Nias
Norman
Norwegian Bokmål
Norwegian Nynorsk
Nupe
⇒ a/languages I–N

Occitan
Old Czech
Old Danish
Old Dutch
Old English
Old French
Old Galician-Portuguese
Old Irish
Old Polish
Old Swedish
Ometepec Nahuatl
Oromo
Palauan
Polish
Portuguese
Rapa Nui
Rawang
Romagnol
Romani
Romanian
Sardinian
Sassarese
Satawalese
Scots
Scottish Gaelic
Serbo-Croatian
Sicilian
Silesian
Skolt Sami
Slovak
Slovene
Spanish
Sranan Tongo
Sumerian
Swahili
Swedish
Tagalog
Tarantino
Tày
Tok Pisin
Tokelauan
Turkish
Turkmen
Tyap
Upper Sorbian
Vietnamese
Votic
Walloon
Welsh
West Makian
Yola
Yoruba
Yucatec Maya
Zazaki
Zhuang
Zou
Zulu
⇒ a/languages O–Z

Translingual edit

Noun edit

The Translingual entry goes here


English edit

Noun edit

The English entry goes here