comment that the <span class="searchmatch">requested</span> form seems to be an error in your experience. <span class="searchmatch">Requested</span>-<span class="searchmatch">entry</span> pages for other languages: Category:<span class="searchmatch">Requested</span> <span class="searchmatch">entries</span>. --> ftor ribaita...
<span class="searchmatch">requested</span> by going to Wiktionary:<span class="searchmatch">Requested</span> <span class="searchmatch">entries</span> (English) and putting it in the appropriate section. A word in another language can be <span class="searchmatch">requested</span> by...
Ludian, <span class="searchmatch">Veps</span>), but absent from the southern languages (with the possible exception of Ingrian loanwords in Votic: compare Wiktionary:Votic <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> guidelines)...
subsumed into Proto-Uralic on Wiktionary. <span class="searchmatch">Entries</span> for these subdivisions should be created as Proto-Uralic <span class="searchmatch">entries</span>. Descendant words can, however, be still...
the <span class="searchmatch">Veps</span> language gives the following rules for retaining the final vowel of the genitive singular stem in forming the illative singular in <span class="searchmatch">Veps</span> (see...
use in listing subsections beyond the different language <span class="searchmatch">entries</span>. In the vast majority of <span class="searchmatch">entries</span> you can see all the different subsections within the space...
a Sanskrit <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> is through some etymology. I don't recall having seen Sanskrit <span class="searchmatch">entries</span> that are formatted radically different than <span class="searchmatch">entries</span> in other languages...
This list contains <span class="searchmatch">entries</span> and other content pages that use a link template, like {{l}} or {{m}}, to generate a faulty link to a title beginning with...
for this: Category:R:<span class="searchmatch">vep</span>:UVVV with red link). If I make this <span class="searchmatch">entry</span> (отдаляться), it may help understand the meaning of the <span class="searchmatch">Veps</span> word, because the source...
Estonian from 1786, followed by Karelian in 1799, <span class="searchmatch">Veps</span> in 1830 (in the first linguistic report on <span class="searchmatch">Veps</span> to be published), Votic in 1856 (in the first grammar...