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  2. Standard Canadian English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Canadian_English

    Standard Canadian English is the largely homogeneous variety of Canadian English that is spoken particularly across Ontario and Western Canada, as well as throughout Canada among urban middle-class speakers from English-speaking families, [1] excluding the regional dialects of Atlantic Canadian English. Canadian English has a mostly uniform ...

  3. List of emergency telephone numbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emergency...

    Country Police Ambulance Fire Notes Afghanistan 119: 112: 119 Bahrain 999: Mobile phones – 112, Traffic police – 199, Coast Guard – 994. Bangladesh 999: Anti Corruption Commission – 106, Agricultural Information Services – 16123, Health Services – 16263, Dhaka WASA – 16162, Women and Children Ministry – 109, Legal Services – 16430, National Information Service — 333, IEDCR ...

  4. Two-letter country codes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-letter_country_codes

    Two-letter country codes. Two-letter country codes are used to represent countries and states (often both widely recognized and not) as a code of two letters. ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 is the main set of two-letter country codes that is currently used. This standard set of codes is a part of ISO 3166-1, also maintains a list of three-letter codes for ...

  5. Cree syllabics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cree_syllabics

    These were standardized in 1865 to form Eastern Cree syllabics, used today for many eastern dialects of Cree, Naskapi, and Ojibwe, though Cree dialects of eastern Quebec use the Latin alphabet. The two versions differ primarily in the way they indicate syllable-final consonants, in how they mark the semi-vowel /w/ , and in how they reflect the ...

  6. Morse code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_code

    Chart of the Morse code 26 letters and 10 numerals. This Morse key was originally used by Gotthard railway, later by a shortwave radio amateur. Morse code is a method used in telecommunication to encode text characters as standardized sequences of two different signal durations, called dots and dashes, or dits and dahs.

  7. Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada

    Canada has a highly developed mixed-market economy, [270] [271] with the world's ninth-largest economy as of 2023 [update], and a nominal GDP of approximately US$ 2.221 trillion. [272] It is one of the world's largest trading nations, with a highly globalized economy. [273]

  8. National symbols of Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_symbols_of_Canada

    The five flowers on the shield surrounded by maple leafs each represent an ethnicity— Tudor rose: English; Fleur de lis: French; thistle: Scottish; shamrock: Irish; and leek: Welsh. Canada's most well known symbol is the maple leaf, which was first used by French colonists in the 1700s. [7] Since the 1850s, under British rule, the maple leaf ...

  9. Basque alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basque_alphabet

    The letters of the Basque alphabet are the 26 letters of the ISO basic Latin alphabet plus ñ . The letter ç is officially not considered a separate letter, but a variant of c . This is the whole list, [1] plus their corresponding phonemes in IPA: [2] * Although c, ç, q, v, w, y are not used in traditional Basque language words, they were ...