'''Natural languages''' are languages that evolved among creatures in the natural world. This page is a guide to using and processing those languages with Tcl. ** See Also ** [An i15d date chooser]: [Bag of number/time spellers]: [gradint]: A program for self-study of foreign languages. [i18n - writing for the world]: [Input Method Editor]: [Language identification]: [Playing machine translation]: [taiku goes multilingual]: [Time-dependent greetings]: [Unicode and UTF-8]: [The Lish family]: 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 Pages ** [Things British%|%British]: The most languagy of languages. [Things Chinese%|%Chinese]: [Things Dutch]: [Things German]: [Esperanto]: [Hebrew]: ** Arabic ** [A simple Arabic renderer]: Needs [bidi rendering]. [Arabic Character Renderer For Readability In TCL/Tk]: This is a working solution ** Greek ** [Greeklish]: ** Korean ** [Hanglish]: [A little Korean editor]: [Korean font encoding for Tcl 8.1]: [some random korean text]: [A little Hangul converter]: ** Mongolian ** [Mongolian in Tcl strimjes]: ** [Pig Latin] ** Yup. [Pig Latin]. ** Russian ** [Ruslish]: [A tiny input manager]: [russian on-screen keyboard]: [TclTk russian manual pages]: ** Sanskrit ** [Easy input of Romanised Sanskrit]: ** Turkish ** [An anomaly in case conversion]: <> Human Language | Local