[Wikipedia-l] About language names
Lars Aronsson
lars at aronsson.se
Mon Jan 31 15:00:36 UTC 2005
Gerard Meijssen wrote:
> You find "Italiano" not "italiano" in the interwiki links. That is different.
> If you are in a primary school in Italy, your teacher will make you learn the
> difference :) .
If at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_language
you click the "Français" interwiki link, you will arrive at a page
where "Français" is spelled with a capital F because it is a title.
The first words of that article is "Le français est une langue
romane...". In the fact box to the right, the "Organigramme
classification" begins with "Indo-européen" and ends with
"Français", once again with a capital "F", because it is an element
in a list. Clearly, the name of the language *can* be written with a
capital F, when it is a title or an element in a list.
If at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_language
you click the "Italiano" interwiki link, you will arrive at a page
where the title is "Lingua italiano", but where the first words of the
article is "L'Italiano è una lingua...". In the fact box to the
right, there is a "Famiglie linguistiche" list that begins with
"Lingue indoeuropee" and ends with "Italiano". Clearly, Italiano can
be spelled with a capital I if it begins a sentence or if it is a
member of a list.
If you try to deny this, I think your primary school teacher will
correct you.
--
Lars Aronsson (lars at aronsson.se)
Aronsson Datateknik - http://aronsson.se
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