Home
×

Filipino
Filipino

Dutch
Dutch



ADD
Compare
X
Filipino
X
Dutch

Filipino and Dutch Language Codes

Add ⊕
1 Code
1.1 ISO 639 1
No Data Available
nl
1.2 ISO 639 2
1.2.1 ISO 639 2/T
fil
nld
1.2.2 ISO 639 2/B
fil
dut
1.3 ISO 639 3
fil
nld
1.4 ISO 639 6
Not Available
Not Available
1.5 Glottocode
fili1244
mode1257
1.6 Linguasphere
No Data Available
52-ACB-a
1.7 Types of Language
1.7.1 Language Type
Living
Historical
1.7.2 Language Linguistic Typology
Not Available
Subject-Object-Verb
1.7.3 Language Morphological Typology
Not Available
Synthetic

Filipino vs Dutch Language Codes

The Filipino and Dutch language codes are the codes which are used to represent languages in the form of letters and/or numbers. Filipino vs Dutch language codes serve you with ISO codes, glottocodes and linguasphere codes. There is no linguasphere code of Filipino while linguasphere code of Dutch is 52-ACB-a. Take look at Filipino vs Dutch so that you get a brief idea of these languages.

Filipino and Dutch ISO Language Codes

ISO language codes are designed to represent most of the languages in the world. Filipino and Dutch ISO language codes consists of ISO 639 1, ISO 639 2, ISO 639 3 codes. ISO 639 1 is the two letter code, while ISO 639 2 and ISO 639 3 are three letter codes.

    Filipino ISO Codes:
  • ISO 639 1 code: No Data Available
  • ISO 639 2/T code: fil
  • ISO 639 2/B code: fil
  • ISO 639 3 code: fil
    Dutch ISO Codes:
  • ISO 639 1 code: nl
  • ISO 639 2/T code: nld
  • ISO 639 2/B code: dut
  • ISO 639 3 code: nld

Go through Filipino vs Dutch alphabets to know number of alphabets, vowels and consonants.

Filipino vs Dutch Glottocodes

You will find Filipino vs Dutch glottocodes under the Filipino and Dutch language codes. Filipino glottocode is fili1244 and Dutch glottocode is mode1257. Along with Filipino and Dutch language codes, you can also check how many people speak these languages on Filipino vs Dutch.

More on Filipino and Dutch Language Codes

Explore more on Filipino and Dutch language codes to understand more about these languages. Filipino and Dutch language codes are unique and are used in wide range of applications. The language codes are mainly used in the computer and information systems. The ISO codes are set of international standards that are short unique representation for language names.

Let Others Know
×