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Northern Sami Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Favicon of Wikipedia Northern Sami Wikipedia
Type of site
Internet encyclopedia project
Available inNorthern Sami
OwnerWikimedia Foundation
URLse.wikipedia.org
CommercialNo
RegistrationOptional
Content license
Creative Commons Attribution/
Share-Alike
4.0
(most text also dual-licensed under GFDL)
Media licensing varies

The Northern Sami Wikipedia is the edition of Wikipedia in the Northern Sami language.[1]

It was used as one example of how Wikipedia's categories system works (in the context of social ontologies).[2]

Statistics

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It started in 2004 and has 7,894 articles, ranking 187th of all Wikipedias.[3]

Readers

It is 134th of about 290 in number of page requests: half a million page requests per month, but not possible to know how many human readers.

Content

It is 137th of about 290 in number of articles (there are 7,894); articles are about 500 characters long on average with approximately 400 000 words in total. It's above average in terms of editors/speakers and articles/speakers, there are many articles about towns around the world (mostly automated creations).

User activity

There were almost no new articles in 2008–2011, new articles usually come in bursts; in 2013 editing activity was lower than in previous years with fewer than 10 active editors per month making fewer than 100 edits per month.[4] There are currently 29 active users and activity is still low.

Notes

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  1. ^ (in Northern Sami) Yle Ođđasat Saamenkieliset tv-uutiset, Digisaame Archived 2014-03-19 at archive.today, Yle TV1, 2014-02-24. (Section in the Sami news of the main TV channel of Finland.)
  2. ^ Mehler, Alexander; Pustylnikov, Olga; Diewald, Nils (2008). "Geography of Social Ontologies: Testing a Variant of the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis in the Context of Wikipedia" (PDF). Computer Speech & Language. 25 (3): 716–740. doi:10.1016/j.csl.2010.05.006.
  3. ^ "List of Wikipedias". Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  4. ^ All these statistics from Erik Zachte, Wikipedia Statistics Northern Sami, stats.wikimedia.org (accessed 19 March 2014).
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