Wiktionary is a
multilingual,
web-based
dictionary project, edited as a
wiki. As of June 2024, Wiktionary entries have been created in 193 editions, with 169 currently active and 24 closed.[1]
This is a table of detailed statistics of Wiktionaries.
These statistics cover a range of metrics, such as entry counts, total page numbers, user accounts, and more.
Notes
The "total pages" column refers to the number of pages in all namespaces, including both entries and non-entries (user pages, files, talk pages, "project" pages, categories, redirects, and templates).
"Users" refers to the number of user accounts, regardless of current activity – not the number of people or devices using (accessing) Wiktionary.
"Active users" are registered users who have made at least one edit in the last thirty days.
"Files" is the number of locally uploaded files.
Edition details
Notes cannot be added directly into table header - please see "Notes" section just above
Selected totals of assets and involved people for all Wiktionaries
Entries
Total pages
Edits
Admins
Users
Active users
Files
Percentage
Total
39,306,354
47,946,330
287,357,521
566
7,299,106
6,363
3,933
100%
Languages that use Wikipedia to serve their Wiktionary
The
Alemannic Wiktionary has been created as a separate namespace within the Alemannic Wikipedia.
The
Bavarian Wiktionary has been created as a separate namespace within the Bavarian Wikipedia.
The
Classical Chinese Wiktionary has been created as a separate namespace within the Classical Chinese Wikipedia.
The
Palatine German Wiktionary has been created as a separate namespace within the Palatine German Wikipedia.
The
Scots Wiktionary has been created as a separate namespace within the Scots Wikipedia. For historical reasons, the
incubator:Wt/sco test project co-exists, but it is planned to migrate to the Scots Wikipedia.