The following pages link to East Asian languages
External toolsShowing 50 items.
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Austroasiatic languages (links | edit)
- Afroasiatic languages (links | edit)
- Altaic languages (links | edit)
- Aspirated consonant (links | edit)
- Basque language (links | edit)
- Comparative method (links | edit)
- Dravidian languages (links | edit)
- Etruscan language (links | edit)
- Languages of Europe (links | edit)
- Esperanto grammar (links | edit)
- Grammatical gender (links | edit)
- Indo-European languages (links | edit)
- Qi (links | edit)
- Sino-Tibetan languages (links | edit)
- Kra–Dai languages (links | edit)
- Turkic languages (links | edit)
- Uralic languages (links | edit)
- Ural-Altaic languages (links | edit)
- Grammatical number (links | edit)
- Typewriter (links | edit)
- Swastika (links | edit)
- List of linguists (links | edit)
- Austronesian languages (links | edit)
- Sumerian language (links | edit)
- Ibero-Caucasian languages (links | edit)
- Northwest Caucasian languages (links | edit)
- Northeast Caucasian languages (links | edit)
- Japanese grammar (links | edit)
- Languages of Asia (links | edit)
- Gender neutrality in languages with gendered third-person pronouns (links | edit)
- Burushaski (links | edit)
- Politeness (links | edit)
- Mongolic languages (links | edit)
- Mojibake (links | edit)
- Eskaleut languages (links | edit)
- Languages of East Asia (links | edit)
- Pontic languages (links | edit)
- Nivkh languages (links | edit)
- Paleo-Siberian languages (links | edit)
- Tungusic languages (links | edit)
- Camunic language (links | edit)
- Ligurian language (ancient) (links | edit)
- Yale romanization (links | edit)
- Hattic language (links | edit)
- Postalveolar consonant (links | edit)
- Alarodian languages (links | edit)
- Elamo-Dravidian languages (links | edit)
- Elamite language (links | edit)
- Chukotko-Kamchatkan languages (links | edit)
- Japonic languages (links | edit)