ISO 639
ISO 639 is a standard by the International Organization for Standardization concerned with the representation of languages and language groups.
It currently consists of four sets of code, named after each part which formerly described respective set ; a part 6 was published but withdrawn.
It was first approved in 1967 as a single-part ISO Recommendation, ISO/R 639, superseded in 2002 by part 1 of the new series, ISO 639-1, followed by additional parts. All existing parts of the series were consolidated into a single standard in 2023, largely based on the text of ISO 639-4.
Use of ISO 639 codes
The language codes defined in the several sections of ISO 639 are used for bibliographic purposes and, in computing and internet environments, as a key element of locale data. The codes also find use in various applications, such as Wikipedia URLs for its different language editions.History
The early form of ISO's language coding system was manifested by ISO/R 639:1967 titled Symbols for Languages, Countries and Authorities, which aimed chiefly to regulate vocabularies signifying languages, countries, and standardization agencies of ISO member bodies. Its "language symbols" consisted of one- or two-letter variable-length identifiers in capitalized Latin alphabets, e.g.E or En for English; S, Sp, or Es for Spanish; and In for Indonesian. It was also allowed to use UDC numeral auxiliaries to indicate languages.| Name | 1-letter | 2-letter | UDC | ||
| Afrikaans | — | Af | =393.6 | af | af |
| Arabic | — | Ar | =927 | ar | ar |
| Bulgarian | — | Bg | =867 | bg | bg |
| Chinese | C | Ch | =951 | zh | zh |
| Czech | — | Cs | =850 | cs | cs |
| German | D | De | =30 | de | de |
| Danish | — | Da | =398 | da | da |
| English | E | En | =20 | en | en |
| Esperanto | — | Eo | =089.2 | eo | eo |
| Spanish | S | Es Sp | =60 | es | es |
| French | F | Fr | =40 | fr | fr |
| Finnish | — | Fi | =945.41 | fi | fi |
| Greek | G | Gr | =75 | el | el |
| Hebrew | — | He | =924 | iw | he |
| Hindi | — | Hi | =914.3 | hi | hi |
| Hungarian | — | Hu | =945.11 | hu | hu |
| Italian | I | It | =50 | it | it |
| Interlingua | — | Ia | =089.7 | ia | ia |
| Interlingue | — | Ie | =089.6 | ie | ie |
| Indonesian | — | In | =992.21 | in | id |
| Japanese | J | Ja | =956 | ja | ja |
| Korean | — | Ko | =957 | ko | ko |
| Latin | L | La | =71 | la | la |
| Dutch | — | Nl | =393.1 | nl | nl |
| Norwegian | — | No | =396 | no | no |
| Polish | — | Pl | =84 | pl | pl |
| Portuguese | — | Pt | =690 | pt | pt |
| Russian | R | Ru | =82 | ru | ru |
| Romanian | — | Ro | =590 | ro | ro |
| Sanskrit | — | Sa | =912.3 | sa | sa |
| Serbo-Croat | — | Sh | =861/862 | sh | — |
| Slovak | — | Sk | =854 | sk | sk |
| Slovenian | — | Sn | =863 | sl | sl |
| Swedish | — | Sv | =397 | sv | sv |
| Turkish | — | Tr | =943.5 | tr | tr |
| Ukrainian | — | Uk | =83 | uk | uk |
| Urdu | — | Ur | =914.31 | ur | ur |
After decoupling the country code into ISO 3166 in 1974, the first edition of the standard ISO 639:1988 Code for the representation of names of languages was published with a framework of uniformly two-letter identifiers in lowercase Latin alphabets, mostly identical in format and vocabulary to that of the current ISO 639 Set 1.
Since then, the standard has been adopted as a fundamental technology of the rapidly expanding computer industry, leading to development of more expressive three-letter framework, published as ISO 639-2:1998, largely based on MARC codes for languages. The original two-letter system was redefined as ISO 639-1 in 2001.
Seeking for more extensive support of languages for widening applications, separate supersets of the ISO 639-2 namespace that cover individual languages and groups were established as ISO 639-3 and ISO 639-5, respectively. There was also an attempt to code more precise language variants using four-letter identifiers as ISO 639-6, which was later withdrawn and to be reorganized under another framework, ISO 21636.
Relatively constant updates in parts of ISO 639 had been handled by each own authority in charge until the publication of ISO 639:2023, which harmonized and reunified the body text of former standards and brought about organizational change with a joint maintenance agency supervising all sets and issuing newsletters. The maintenance agency is located in Norway.
Current sets and historical parts of the standard
Each set of the standard is maintained by a language coding agency, which adds codes and changes the status of codes when needed. ISO 639-6 was withdrawn in 2014, and not included in ISO 639:2023.Characteristics of individual codes
Scopes:- Individual languages
- Macrolanguages
- Collections of languages. Some collections were already in Set 2, and others were added only in Set 5:
- * Remainder groups: 36 collections in both Set 2 and 5 are of this kind — for compatibility with Set 2 when Set 5 was still not published, the remainder groups do not contain any language and collection that was already coded in Set 2 ;
- ** The only collection which previously assigned with two-alphabet code is Bihari during the Part 1 era, which deprecated in June 2021.
- * Regular groups: 29 collections in both Sets 2 and 5 are of this kind — for compatibility with Set 2, they can not contain other groups;
- * Families: 50 new collections coded only in Set 5 — for compatibility with Set 2, they may contain other collections except remainder groups.
- Dialects: they were intended to be covered by former ISO 639-6.
- Special situations.
- Reserved for local use. Also used sometimes in applications needing a two-letter code like standard codes in Sets 1 and 2, or a three-letter code for collections like standard codes in Set 5.
- Living languages
- Extinct languages
- Historical languages
- * 124 of those were categorised as Ancient languages, this type has merged into Historical since about 2024
- Constructed languages
- Bibliographic : these are legacy codes.
- Terminologic : these are the preferred codes.
- All others only have a single three-letter code for both uses.
Relations between the sets
The different sets of ISO 639 are designed to work together, in such a way that no code means one thing in one set and something else in another. However, not all languages are in all sets, and there is a variety of different ways that specific languages and other elements are treated in the different sets. This depends, for example, whether a language is listed in Sets 1 or 2, whether it has separate B/T codes in Set 2, or is classified as a macrolanguage in Set 3, and so forth.These various treatments are detailed in the following chart. In each group of rows, the last four columns contain codes for a representative language that exemplifies a specific type of relation between the sets of ISO 639, the second column provides an explanation of the relationship, and the first column indicates the number of elements that have that type of relationship. For example, there are four elements that have a code in Set 1, have a B/T code, and are classified as macrolanguages in Set 3. One representative of these four elements is "Persian"
fa/per/fas.These differences are due to the following factors.
In ISO 639 Set 2, two distinct codes were assigned to 22 individual languages, namely a bibliographic and a terminology code. B codes were included for historical reasons because previous widely used bibliographic systems used language codes based on the English name for the language. In contrast, the Set 1 codes were based on the native name for the language, and there was also a strong desire to have Set 2 codes for these languages which were similar to the corresponding 2-character code in Set 1.
- For instance, the German language has two codes in Set 2:
geranddeu, whereas there is only one code in Set 2,eng, for the English language. - 2 former B codes were withdrawn, leaving today only 20 pairs of B/T codes.
- Set 3
engcorresponds to Set 2engand Set 1en - Set 3
astcorresponds to Set 2astbut lacks a code in Set 1.
- 1 macrolanguage has a Set 2 code and a Set 1 code, while its member individual languages also have codes in Set 1 and Set 2:
nor/nocontainsnno/nn,nob/nb; or - 4 macrolanguages have two Set 2 codes and a Set 1 code:
per/fas/fa,may/msa/ms,alb/sqi/sq, andchi/zho/zh; - 28 macrolanguages have a Set 2 code but no Set 1 code;
- 29 other macrolanguages only have codes in Set 3.
aus in Sets 2 and 5, which stands for Australian languages.- Some codes were added in Set 5 but had no code in Set 2: e.g.
sqj
- Codes
qaathroughqtzare reserved for local use. - There are four special codes:
misfor languages that have no code yet assigned,mulfor "multiple languages",undfor "undefined", andzxxfor "no linguistic content, not applicable".
Code space
Two-letter code space
Two-letter identifiers are used in Set 1. When codes for a wider range of languages were desired, more than 2 letter combinations could cover, Set 2 was developed using three-letter codes.Three-letter code space
Three-letter identifiers are used in Set 2, Set 3, and Set 5. The number of languages and language groups that can be so represented is 263 = 17,576.The common use of three-letter codes by three sets of ISO 639 requires some coordination within a larger system.
Set 2 defines four special codes
mis, mul, und, zxx, a reserved range qaa-qtz and has 20 double entries, plus 2 entries with deprecated B-codes. This sums up to 520 + 22 + 4 = 546 codes that cannot be used in Set 3 to represent languages or in Set 5 to represent language families or groups. The remainder is 17,576 – 546 = 17,030.There are somewhere around six to seven thousand languages on Earth today. So those 17,030 codes are adequate to assign a unique code to each language, although some languages may end up with arbitrary codes that sound nothing like the traditional name of that language.