ISO 639-1 : diforc'h etre ar stummoù

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Rann gentañ [[ISO 639]] eo '''ISO 639-1''' ha talvezout da [[Kod yezh|god yezh unvan]], ennañ 136 kod divlizherennek implijet evit anavezout yezhoù brasañ (pe muiañ-implijet) ar bed, da skouer:
'''ISO 639-1''' is the first part of the [[ISO 639]] [[International Organization for Standardization|international-standard]] [[language code|language-code]] family. It consists of 136 two-letter codes used to identify the world's major languages. These codes are a useful international shorthand for indicating languages. For example:
 
*[[English language|English]] is represented by <tt>en</tt>
*[[German language|Germansaozneg]] is represented by: <tt>deen</tt> (fromdiwar thear [[endonym]]stumm saoznek "'''En'Deutsch''glish")
*[[Japanese language|Japanesealamaneg]] is represented by: <tt>jade</tt> (evendiwar thoughar itsstumm endonym isalamanek "'''De'Nihongo''utsch")
*[[japaneg]]: <tt>ja</tt> (diwar ar stumm saoznek "'''Ja'''panese"; e japaneg: ''nihongo'')
 
The ISO 639-1 list became an official standard in 2002, but had existed in draft format for some years before. The last code added was <tt>ht</tt>, representing [[Haitian Creole]] on [[2003-02-26]]. The use of the standard was encouraged by RFC 1766 from March [[1995]], and continued by RFC 3066 from January [[2001]]. [[Infoterm]] (International Information Center for Terminology) is the registration authority for ISO 639-1 codes.