In a sense the standardized format is very arbitrary, and has been pursued in the absence of alternatives being proposed. At the top level for a language the format is [[Index:Language]]. When there is enough material to warrant splitting the index, this is being done by letter, using subpages like [[Index:Language/a]] with the referenced letter in lower case. There should not be made any distinction between uppercase and lowercase letters. Appropriate modifications need to be made for scripts that are not strictly alphabetic (e.g., Chinese).
In a sense the standardized format is very arbitrary, and has been pursued in the absence of alternatives being proposed. At the top level for a language the format is [[Index:Language]]. When there is enough material to warrant splitting the index, this is being done by letter, using subpages like [[Index:Language/a]] with the referenced letter in lower case. There should not be made any distinction between uppercase and lowercase letters. Appropriate modifications need to be made for scripts that are not strictly alphabetic (e.g., Chinese). Some language lists have been further sub-divided, but no standard has yet been suggested. serves the same purpose as this list but is automated. For a more general list of languages and their indexes see Wiktionary:List of languages or . The following language indexes are periodically updated by Conrad.Bot: Key Page and language section (visited) Page does not exist (visited) Page without language section (visited) ► Audio file These link to pages on which the indexed term is mentioned * As a translation ^ As a derived term (French only) = As a synonym (French only) Part of speech abbreviations n Noun v Verb adj Adjective proper Proper noun prep Preposition