Since the introduction of ISO 639-3 in 2007, access to language information has increased tremendously. The code set initially adopted as ISO639-3:2007 was based on a harmonization of ISO 639-2 with the code set of SIL’s Ethnologue 15th edition and languages from Linguist List to form a comprehensive set of code elements for world languages. SIL International, the Language Coding Agency for 639-3, relies on the contributions of linguists, language coding experts, and language users around the world to maintain and improve the code set through the change request process defined in the ISO 639 standard. [from homepage]
iso.639-3The metaregistry provides mappings between the Semantic Farm and other registries. There are 2 mappings to external registries for this resource with 2 unique external prefixes.
| Registry Name | Registry Metaprefix | External Prefix | Curate |
|---|---|---|---|
|
FAIRSharing
|
fairsharing |
FAIRsharing.33aa85
|
|
HL7
|
hl7 |
1.0.639.3
|
A provider turns a local unique identifiers from a resource into a URI. Many providers are also resolvable as URLs (i.e., they can be used in a web browser).
The local unique identifier spa is used to demonstrate the providers
available for ISO 639 3-Letter Language Code. Some providers may use a different example, which is displayed in the table below.
A guide for curating additional providers can be found
here.
| Name | Metaprefix | URI |
|---|---|---|
| ISO 639 3-Letter Language Code | iso.639-3 |
https://iso639-3.sil.org/code/spa |
| Bioregistry | bioregistry |
https://bioregistry.io/iso.639-3:spa |
Additional providers curated in the Semantic Farm are listed here. These are typically inherited from Identifiers.org or Prefix Commons, and need extra curation.
| Code | Name | URL |
|---|---|---|
loc |
ISO 639-2: Codes for the Representation of Names of Languages - Part 2: Alpha-3 Code for the Names of Languages | http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/iso639-2/spa |