Purpose: Collect Wiki and other urls relating to the Tcl processing of natural/human languages. Well, if someone wants to point to Tcl processing of other languages (animal, non-Terran, etc.) that is fine. I am trying to distinguish this from computer languages. ---- General introduction: [i18n - writing for the world] - [Unicode and UTF-8] - [An i15d date chooser] * Arabic*: [A simple Arabic renderer] needs [bidi rendering] * Chinese*: [Chinlish] - [Chinese numbers] - [Animated kanji] * Chinese*: [Pinyin, ASCII to Unicode Converter] * Chinese*: [Easy input of Pinyin] * English*: [English number reader] - [English plurals] - [Things British] * [Esperanto] * German plurals (incomplete) in [Custom curry] - [Things German] * Greek*: [Greeklish] * [Hebrew]*: [Heblish] needs [bidi rendering] - [Hebrew numbers] * Japanese*: [Japlish] - [Things Japanese] - [Animated Kanji] * Korean*: [Hanglish] - [A little Korean editor] - [A little Hangul converter] * [Mongolian in Tcl strimjes] * [Pig Latin] :-) * Russian*: [Ruslish] - [A tiny input manager] * Sanskrit*: [Easy input of Romanised Sanskrit] * Turkish: [An anomaly in case conversion] *: input supported by taiku, see [taiku goes multilingual] ---- * [Time-dependent greetings] * [Bag of number/time spellers] ---- [The Lish family] is a set of converter procedures from 7-bit ASCII to a number of writing systems that use other and more characters: starting from European accented letters in [Eurolish], to [Greeklish], [Ruslish] up to the Far East: [Chinlish], [Japlish], [Hanglish]. In each case, input is a 7-bit ASCII string, output is a Unicode string. See [Languages supported by Lish]. ---- * [Language identification] * [Playing machine translation] <> Human Language | Local