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Filipino (Tagalog)

Langue

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Inuktitut

Langue

This page has been translated automatically. Today, the Inuit language counts over 100,000 speakers, unevenly distributed across the northernmost lands of North America: Alaska, the Canadian Arctic and Greenland. It is closely related to the Yupik languages of Alaska and Chukotka, with which it forms the eastern branch of the Eskaleut language family.

Lao (Laotian)

Langue

This page has been translated automatically. Taught in the South-East Asia and Pacific Department, Lao, closely related to Siamese, is an invariable language with tones and durations. Originally monosyllabic, it has been enriched with numerous polysyllables through contact with Khmer, Mône and, above all, the liturgical languages of Buddhism: Pāli and Sanskrit.

Judeo-Spanish

Langue

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Ilocano

Langue

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Passing on the Langues O' spirit: bequests, life insurance, gifts

Page de contenu

For over two centuries, Inalco has cultivated a singular passion: understanding the world through the diversity of languages and civilizations. This intellectual demand, founded on curiosity, wonder, openness and respect for languages and civilizations, is the Langues O' spirit.

Nenets

Langue

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Neo-Aramaic (Soureth)

Langue

This page has been translated automatically. Since February 2007, we've been offering an introductory course in Sureth (contemporary Aramaic) at Inalco (Paris), open to students of Licence III and Master I in the Department of Arab Studies (Near and Middle East), Hebrew, Kurdish, Persian and Turkish. This introductory course requires no prior knowledge of this living Semitic language.

Expérimentarium: seven PhD students trained in science popularization at Inalco

Actualité

Menu Formations

Published on 19/01/2026

From January 5 to 15, Inalco hosted a new session of the Expérimentarium training program, designed to help PhD students learn how to popularize science and speak to non-specialist audiences.

Swahili

Langue

This page has been translated automatically. Swahili, with an estimated 90 to over 110 million speakers, is spoken throughout East Africa and parts of Central Africa. It enjoys the status of national and official language in Tanzania, and national language in Kenya and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Swahili is the lingua franca of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, northern Mozambique and, to a lesser extent, Malawi, Zambia and southern Sudan.