Ta̱mpi̱let:Transliteration/sandbox
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'Module:UnitTests' not found.
This is the template sandbox page for Ta̱mpi̱let:Transliteration (diff). See also the companion subpage for test cases. |
Lua error in Module:Redirect_hatnote at line 66: attempt to call field 'quote' (a nil value).
This template is used on many pages and changes may be widely noticed. Test changes in the template's /sandbox or /testcases subpages, or in your own user subpage. Consider discussing changes on the talk page before implementing them. |
This template should not be used in citation templates such as Citation Style 1 and Citation Style 2, because it includes markup that will pollute the COinS metadata they produce; see Wikipedia:COinS. |
This template uses Lua: |
Language templates |
---|
Language names (ISO 639) |
|
Interwiki links |
Foreign-language text |
|
Other |
This template is used to mark up text transliterated or romanised from a non-Latin alphabet script to Latin alphabet script.
This template should only be used for the transliterations of non-Latin scripts; for non-English language text displayed in its native script (such as Greek, Cyrillic and Arabic), {{lang}} should be used, which tags non-transliterated text (written in original script). Transl often used alongside that template, to allow non-readers of the script to interpret the text.
This template adds a tooltip label naming the transliteration scheme, and renders text in italics by default. This template is important for , as it invisibly tags text with the correct language, allowing for screenreaders to the correct style of pronunciation.
It also displays text in an appropriate font; romanisations marked up in {{lang}} may display in fonts designed for that language's native text, whereas the transl template displays text in the same font as the rest of the article.
Some languages, such as Chinese, have more than one style of transliteration (such as Wade-Giles, pinyin, etc). This template can be used for these different transliteration schemes, though Wikipedia has a number of language-specific templates, some of which support more than one transliteration styles in their parameters, that may be better suited for marking up transliterations.
Example
jhyukThe following code tags a Ukrainian name and its transliteration according to the Ukrainian National scheme.
Markup [[:Ta̱mpi̱let: | Renders as |
---|---|
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
[markup] |
[rendering] |
Rationale
jhyukThis template is intended to unify all "transliteration" templates, such as {{IAST}} and {{ISOtranslit}}. These templates are still usable, but they just transclude or are redirected back to {{transl}}. For example, (e.g. {{IAST|saṃskṛtam}}
is a shortcut for {{transliteration|sa|IAST|saṃskṛtam}}
. Other transliteration templates that once existed, such as {{ArabDIN}}, are now handled natively by this template: {{transliteration|ar|DIN|...}}
).
This template is kept separate from {{lang}} to address formatting issues (via CSS classes) and identification of transliteration schemes used. Ultimately, if these concerns are smartly addressed in the CSS file and/or in {{lang}}, using {{transliteration|xx|...}}
should be equivalent to using {{lang|xx-Latn|...}}
.
Usage
jhyukThere are two ways of using this template: with or without specifying the transliteration scheme used:
- two parameters, with ISO 639 language code:
{{transliteration|ar|al-Khwarizmi}}
means that "al-Khwarizmi" is a transliteration from the Arabic in a loose or unspecified scheme. - two parameters, with ISO 15924 script code:
{{transliteration|Ogam|MAQI}}
means that "MAQI" transliterates an Ogham inscription without specifying the language. Potentially useful when writing systems themselves are under discussion, e.g.{{transliteration|Cyrl|š}}
, not{{transliteration|cu|š}}
or{{transliteration|ru|š}}
when discussing the letter ШTa̱mpi̱let:Script/doc/id-unk. - three parameters, with ISO 639 language code:
{{transliteration|ar|DIN|al-Ḫawārizmī}} / {{transliteration|ar|ALA|al-Khawārizmī}}
the second parameter specifies the scheme used (DIN vs. ALA). - three parameters, with ISO 15924 script code:
{{transliteration|Arab|DIN|Ḫ}} vs {{transliteration|Arab|ALA|Kh}}
for ﺥ.
|italic=no
can be added to suppress the default italicization of Latin scripts; however, proper nouns – the names of people and places – are typically not italicized, and as such, generally do not require the use of a transliteration template. Note that there is no need to add italic markup (''
) to transliteration templates.
Note that the language code is ISO 639, not the IETF BCP 47 language tags that allow variants.
Transliteration scheme codes
jhyukCodes for supported transliteration schemes can be seen by viewing the source of Module:Lang/data – the translit_title_table
data-structure lists for each such code the corresponding transliteration schemes. These may vary by language – e.g. code "ISO" means scheme ISO 233 for Arabic but ISO 11940 for Thai.
Examples
jhyukInputting:
{{transliteration|ar|[[al-Khwarizmi]]}} / [[DIN 31635]]: {{transliteration|ar|DIN|al-Ḫawārizmī}} / [[ISO 233]]: {{transliteration|ar|ISO|al-H̱awārizmī}} / [[ALA-LC Romanization|ALA]]: {{transliteration|ar|ALA|al-Khawārizmī}}
[[Royal Thai General System of Transcription|RTGS]]: {{transliteration|th|phasa thai}} / [[ISO 11940]]: {{transliteration|th|ISO|p̣hās̄ʹāthịy}}
{{cuneiform|[[Sumerian language|𒅴𒂠]]}} {{transliteration|sux|EME.GIR<sub>15</sub>}} / {{cuneiform|6|[[Hittite language|𒉈𒅆𒇷]]}} {{transliteration|hit|ne-ši-li}}
Results in:
- al-Khwarizmi / DIN 31635: al-Ḫawārizmī / ISO 233: al-H̱awārizmī / ALA: al-Khawārizmī
- RTGS: phasa thai / ISO 11940: p̣hās̄ʹāthịy
- Ta̱mpi̱let:Cuneiform EME.GIR15 / Ta̱mpi̱let:Cuneiform ne-ši-li
ISO:
- русский
{{transliteration|ru|ISO|russkij}}
: russkij - Аҧсуа
{{transliteration|ab|ISO|aṗsua}}
: aṗsua - عربي
{{transliteration|ar|ISO|ʿarabī}}
: ʿarabī- ISO has huge issues transliterating alif, so it's better to use the Library of Congress transliteration, the German Institute for Standardization or Hans Wehr transliteration; see Arabic transliteration and
- தமிழ்
{{transliteration|ta|ISO|tamiḻ}}
: tamiḻ - বাংলা
{{transliteration|bn|ISO|baṅla}}
: baṅla - ελληνικά
{{transliteration|el|ISO|ellēniká}}
: ellēniká - ქართული
{{transliteration|ka|ISO|k'art'uli}}
: k'art'uli - 漢語拼音
{{transliteration|zh|ISO|hànyǔ pīnyīn}}
: hànyǔ pīnyīn - ภาษาไทย
{{transliteration|th|ISO|p̣hās̄ʹāthịy}}
: p̣hās̄ʹāthịy
CSS
jhyukIn order to apply a style to all text marked as transliteration, use a CSS selector that chooses all text with transliteration
in the title attribute (tooltip). For instance, if you add the following to your common.css, all transliterations will be colored teal:
[title~=transliteration] { color: teal; }
Tracking category
jhyukTemplateData
jhyukTa̱mpi̱let:Templatedata header
Marks a text span transliterated from a particular language or writing system, and, optionally, according to a specific transliteration system.
Parameter | Description | Type | Status | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Language or script code | 1 | ISO 639 language code (e.g., uk) or ISO 15924 script code (e.g., Cyrl) | Line | required |
Text or transliteration scheme | 2 | Source text to be transliterated, or, optionally, transliteration scheme (e.g., bgn/pcgn) | String | required |
Text | 3 | Source text to be transliterated (required if a transliteration scheme is entered above) | String | suggested |
Bu nwuan
jhyuk- {{lang}}, {{language}}
- {{script}}
- {{trans}}, {{translation}}
- Romanization
- List of ISO transliterations
Ta̱mpi̱let:ISO 15924 script codes and related Unicode data