IETF accent tags are abbreviated accent codes; for examples: "en" for English, "pt-BR" for Brazilian Portuguese, or "nan-Hant-TW" for Min Nan Chinese as announced in Taiwan application acceptable Han characters. They are authentic by the BCP 47 accepted track, which is currently composed of normative RFC 5646 (referencing the accompanying RFC 5645) and RFC 4647, forth with the normative agreeable of the IANA Accent Subtag Registry Components of accent tags are fatigued from ISO 639, ISO 15924, ISO 3166-1, and UN M.49.
These accent tags are acclimated in a amount of avant-garde accretion standards, including those from the IETF accompanying to the Internet protocols such as HTTP,those from the W3 Consortium such as HTML, XMLand PNG, and those from added clandestine acclimation bodies such as SGML or Unicode (in some of its accepted annexes), or from civic or bounded accepted bodies like ANSI or ECMA (for archetype in some of their standards accompanying to accretion languages, or to bibliographic references and abstracts allocation acclimated in institutional libraries).
These accent tags are acclimated in a amount of avant-garde accretion standards, including those from the IETF accompanying to the Internet protocols such as HTTP,those from the W3 Consortium such as HTML, XMLand PNG, and those from added clandestine acclimation bodies such as SGML or Unicode (in some of its accepted annexes), or from civic or bounded accepted bodies like ANSI or ECMA (for archetype in some of their standards accompanying to accretion languages, or to bibliographic references and abstracts allocation acclimated in institutional libraries).
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