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This page is for the announcement of milestones on the Wikimedia projects. If you want to make such an announcement, please post it here and translate it if you can.

Recommended article-count milestones are 100, 500, 1k (1,000), 2k, 5k, then 5k increments to 20k, 10k increments to 100k, 50k increments to 200k, 100k increments to 1M (1,000,000), 500k increments to 2M, 1M increments to 10M. Try mixing things up with other milestones, such as active users or new articles per day.

Meta:Babel provides a place for general discussion.

Report news to the Internal news media.

See also: Goings-onSignpost (en) – Kurier (de) – Correio (pt)

November 2013[edit]

5
3
  • The Romanian Wiktionary has reached 90,000 entries, right on schedule, as a bot continues to add thousands of entries per day.
  • The Kurdish Wikibooks has reached 1,000 registered users.

October 2013[edit]

31
30
29
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  • The Romanian Wiktionary has reached 80,000 entries, as the same bot continues to add entries.
26
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22
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18
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September 2013[edit]

29
28
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18
17
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12
11
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  • The Cebuano Wikipedia has reached 800,000 articles, as a bot continues to add stubs about life forms.
  • The Minangkabau Wikipedia has reached 200,000 articles, as the mass stub creation continues with the topic of insects. There have been 190,000 articles added to the wiki in the last week.
9
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  • The Basque Wikipedia has reached 4,000,000 edits, with 152,768 articles and 373,849 pages.
  • The Waray-Waray Wikipedia has reached 800,000 articles, as a bot continues to add stubs about life forms.
7
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5
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2

August 2013[edit]

31
30
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26
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  • Wikivoyage has reached 4,000,000 edits across all languages.
22
21
20
19
18
The Czech Wiktionary 50000 commemorative logo.
17
16
14
13
12
  • The Tamil Wikipedia has reached 10,000 uploaded files.
  • The Cherokee Wiktionary has reached 50,000 entries; the wiki now has almost 200 times as many entries as it had just 4 days ago.
  • The Spanish Wiktionary has reached 200,000 entries, as a bot adds over 50,000 entries in the last 25 hours.
11
10
9
  • The Cherokee Wiktionary has reached 10,000 total pages and 15,000 entries, as the bot moves on to entries in several non-English languages.
8
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6
5
3
  • The Armenian Wikipedia has reached 60,000 articles, as a bot continues to add thousands of short articles about places in Ukraine.
2
1

July 2013[edit]

31
30
29
27
  • The Wikimania 2013 wiki has reached 500 content pages.
  • The Tatar Wikipedia has reached 50,000 articles, as a bot continues to add thousands of short articles to the wiki (currently working through named craters on planets of our solar system).
  • The Russian Wikiversity has reached 3,000 learning modules.
26
25
24
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
  • The Bulgarian Wikipedia has reached 150,000 articles.
  • The Waray-Waray Wikipedia has reached 1,000,000 total pages and 500,000 articles, as a bot continues to add thousands of short articles about, of course, life forms (still working through the insects).
  • The Pashto Wiktionary has reached 20,000 entries.
16
  • The French Wikinews has reached 500,000 page edits.
  • The Vietnamese Wikipedia has reached 800,000 articles, as a bot adds thousands of short articles about Angiosperms.
  • The Cebuano Wikipedia has reached 1,000,000 total pages, as a bot adds thousands of short articles, talk page comments, and categories related to insects.
  • The Urdu Wikipedia has reached 1,000,000 page edits.
  • The Slovenian Wikisource has reached 10,000 text units.
13
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  • The Greek Wikipedia has reached 90,000 articles.
  • The MediaWiki wiki is back up to 100,000 total pages, after dropping significantly below that level back in March 2013.
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June 2013[edit]

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  • The Waray-Waray Wikipedia has reached 400,000 articles, as a bot continues to add (what else?) thousands of short articles about life forms (currently working through the order of insects called Orthoptera).
  • The Swati Wiktionary has reached 1,000 registered users.
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  • The Cebuano Wikipedia has reached 400,000 articles, as a bot continues to add thousands of short articles about life forms (currently working its way through the family of insects called Cicadellidae, the Leafhoppers).
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The Swedish Wikipedia 1,000,000 commemorative logo.
  • The Swedish Wikipedia has reached 1,000,000 articles, as the bot has started again to add thousands of stubs about species of insects. There are now 8 Wikipedias with more than 1,000,000 articles.
14
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The Czech Wikiquote 5000 commemorative logo.
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Vietnamese Wikipedia logo for 750k milestone
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  • The Vietnamese Wikipedia has reached 700,000 articles, as a bot continues to add thousands of short articles about species of flowering plants.
  • The Serbian Wikinews has reached 75,000 articles.
6
5
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  • The Vietnamese Wikipedia has reached 600,000 articles, as a bot adds thousands of short articles about species of flowering plants.
  • The Polish Wikivoyage has reached 1,000 registered users.
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1

May 2013[edit]

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  • Continuing its long, steady fall from a high of over 60,000 "articles" back in December 2012, the Aromanian Wikipedia has just fallen below 500 articles; the wiki is currently at 498 articles.
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The Czech Wikisource 20k commemorative logo.
23
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  • The article count of the Vietnamese Wikibooks seems to have been fixed (somehow), causing the wiki to fall from 6,956 to 881 book modules.
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  • The Greek Wikivoyage opens its doors (and has already reached 2,000 page edits).
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The Spanish Wikipedia's 1M commemorative logo.
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The Russian Wikipedia's 1M commemorative logo.
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April 2013[edit]

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  • The Aromanian Wikipedia continues to shrink as administrators delete "no-content" articles created by bots; it has now fallen to 1,883 articles, having lost another 33% of its (purported) article count in the last 24 hours.

March 2013[edit]

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  • The Piedmontese Wikipedia has reached 10,000 registered users.
  • The Swedish Wikipedia has reached 900,000 articles, five weeks after reaching 800,000, as a bot continues to create thousands of short articles about life forms (currently working its way through the katydids).
  • The Venetian Wikipedia has reached 10,000 articles.
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  • The Aromanian Wikipedia has lost 46% of its (purported) articles in the last 7 hours, as a local administrator continues to delete thousands of "no-content" pages; the wiki currently stands at around 13,500 articles, but is still shrinking.
  • The Tatar Wikipedia has reached 30,000 articles, as a bot has added about 2,300 articles about rivers in Russia.
  • The Wu Wikipedia has lost 40% of its articles, as a local administrator deletes a couple thousand "year" stubs; the wiki currently stands at just over 3,000 articles.
  • The Japanese Wiktionary has reached 90,000 entries.
  • The Finnish Wikiversity has reached 500 learning modules.
12
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  • The Waray-Waray Wikipedia has reached 200,000 articles, as a bot adds thousands of short articles about life forms; it is currently working its way through the class of crustaceans called Malacostraca.
  • The English Wiktionary has reached 1,000,000 registered users.
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February 2013[edit]

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  • The Tatar Wikipedia has reached 20,000 articles, as a bot adds a couple thousand short articles about rivers in Russia.
  • The Lingala Wiktionary has reached 500 entries and 1,000 total pages, as a bot adds several hundred entries for Malagasy words.
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Wikipedia's 25 million total articles
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300k logo of Persian Wikipedia
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  • The Assamese Wikisource has reached 500 text units.
  • Wikidata has reached 4,000,000 content pages.
  • A week after its creation as a separate wiki, the Polish Wikivoyage is finally open for editing by anyone, with content imported from the Incubator and Wikitravel (via JamGuides).
  • The English Wikisource has reached 900,000 text units, almost 7 months after reaching 800,000.
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  • The Malagasy Wikipedia has reached 600,000 page edits.
  • The Cebuano Wikipedia has reached 150,000 articles, one week after reaching 100,000, as a bot continues to create thousands of articles per day for different species; the bot is now working through the order Decapoda.
  • The Kurdish Wikiquote has reached 1,000 total pages and 10,000 page edits.
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January 2013[edit]

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  • The Malagasy Wiktionary has reached 2,000 registered users.
  • The Cebuano Wikipedia has reached 80,000 articles, as a bot continues to create thousands of short articles about different life forms; currently it's working its way through the annelids; the article count has grown by 60% in the last 10 days.
  • The Georgian Wikipedia has reached 70,000 articles, also adding thousands of articles about different life forms.
  • The Finnish Wiktionary has reached 10,000 registered users.
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  • The Cebuano Wikipedia has reached 60,000 articles, as a bot continues to add thousands of short articles about different species.
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  • Wikidata has reached 3,000,000 content pages.
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1 mil logo of Italian Wikipedia
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Javanese Wiktionary tagline using Javanese script: ꦧꦲꦸꦱ​ꦱ꧀ꦠꦿ​ꦧꦺꦧ​ꦱ꧀
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  • The Javanese Wiktionary has reached 5,000 entries and 10,000 total pages, incorporating text from a 1939 Javanese dictionary.

Older news[edit]

For older news items, see the archive at Wikimedia News/2012.

Projects by number of content pages[edit]

The tables below are arranged chronologically by original launch date within two main groups: "interlingual" projects (different wiki for each language) followed by "multilingual" projects (all languages on the same wiki). The older Wikimedia projects (such as Wikipedia) tend to be larger than the newer ones, but note that these tables are not arranged by number of sub-wikis nor by total article count.

Note: You can go directly to the table for Wikipedias, Wiktionaries, Wikiquotes, Wikibooks, Wikisources, Wikinews, Wikiversities, Wikivoyages, Wikimedia Commons, Wikispecies, or Wikidata.

Wikipedias[edit]

See also List of Wikipedias and Wikipedia milestones.

Wikipedias by article-count milestone
Milestone Languages (dates milestones reached, in chronological order)
5,000,000
4,000,000 English (13 July 2012)
3,000,000
2,000,000
1,500,000 German (17 November 2012); Dutch (12 April 2013); Swedish (21 August 2013)
1,000,000 French (21 September 2010); Italian (22 January 2013); Russian (11 May 2013); Spanish (16 May 2013); Polish (24 September 2013)
900,000 Waray-Waray (29 September 2013)
800,000 Japanese (3 April 2012); Vietnamese (16 July 2013); Cebuano (10 September 2013); Portuguese (2 October 2013)
700,000 Chinese (13 June 2013)
600,000
500,000
400,000 Ukrainian (20 September 2012); Catalan (12 April 2013)
300,000 Norwegian (Bokmål) (6 May 2011); Finnish (26 June 2012); Persian (19 February 2013); Indonesian (7 October 2013)
200,000 Czech (6 July 2011); Hungarian (10 September 2011); Korean (19 May 2012); Romanian (5 August 2012); Arabic (21 October 2012); Kazakh (29 November 2012); Turkish (9 December 2012); Malay (21 March 2013); Serbian (6 July 2013); Minangkabau (10 September 2013)
150,000 Danish (26 May 2011); Esperanto (7 August 2011); Slovak (25 March 2012); Lithuanian (14 April 2012); Basque (27 March 2013); Bulgarian (17 July 2013); Hebrew (29 August 2013)
100,000 Volapük (7 September 2007); Slovene (15 August 2010); Croatian (7 July 2011); Hindi (30 August 2011); Estonian (25 August 2012); Galician (4 March 2013); Uzbek (20 March 2013); Norwegian Nynorsk (9 April 2013); Simple English (29 May 2013)
90,000 Azerbaijani (17 September 2012); Latin (6 May 2013); Greek (12 July 2013); Armenian (28 September 2013); Serbo-Croatian (3 October 2013)
80,000 Thai (13 April 2013); Occitan (21 June 2013)
70,000 Georgian (30 January 2013); Nepal Bhasa (9 March 2013); Macedonian (28 March 2013)
60,000 Tagalog (4 February 2013); Piedmontese (27 March 2013); Belarusian (31 May 2013)
50,000 Haitian (20 August 2008); Telugu (13 March 2012); Tamil (18 December 2012); Welsh (19 July 2013); Tatar (27 July 2013); Belarusian/Taraškievica (6 August 2013); Latvian (17 August 2013); Albanian (11 October 2013)
40,000 Breton (17 November 2011); Javanese (5 October 2012) Malagasy (28 December 2012); Bosnian (12 April 2013)
30,000 Marathi (2 July 2010); Luxembourgish (23 August 2010); Icelandic (22 November 2010); Yoruba (23 June 2012); Burmese (24 July 2012); Bashkir (12 February 2013); Malayalam (9 April 2013)
20,000 Bishnupriya Manipuri (19 August 2007); Bengali (28 June 2009); Aragonese (4 April 2010); Swahili (21 August 2010); Ido (24 August 2010); Lombard (14 April 2011); West Frisian (22 May 2011); Gujarati (1 June 2011); Western Panjabi (6 September 2011); Afrikaans (11 November 2011); Nepali (7 May 2012); Cantonese (18 May 2012); Sicilian (27 October 2012); Urdu (28 October 2012); Low German/Low Saxon (2 December 2012); Kyrgyz (3 December 2012); Irish (14 June 2013); Kurdish (19 August 2013); Tajik (9 September 2013)
15,000 Quechua (17 April 2010); Asturian (5 July 2011); Sundanese (20 September 2011); Chuvash (26 March 2013); Scots (1 July 2013); Alemannic (6 August 2013)
10,000 Neapolitan (20 June 2006); Walloon (20 March 2008); Samogitian (8 April 2009); Kannada (14 January 2011); Amharic (27 May 2011); Buginese (8 November 2011); Interlingua (5 December 2011); Banyumasan (10 January 2012); Scottish Gaelic (17 May 2012); Sorani (3 August 2012); Min Nan (24 August 2012); Mazandarani (30 August 2012); Fiji Hindi (11 November 2012); Egyptian Arabic (5 March 2013); Yiddish (16 March 2013); Venetian (25 March 2013); Mongolian (8 August 2013)
5,000 Corsican (22 December 2006); Tarantino (2 August 2007); Maori (10 September 2007); Kapampangan (1 April 2008); Upper Sorbian (23 August 2008); Nahuatl (7 September 2008); Gilaki (30 April 2009); Limburgish (4 October 2009); Sakha (10 October 2009); Ossetian / Ossetic (24 February 2010); Gan (29 March 2010); Central Bicolano (21 April 2011); Faroese (13 July 2011); Hill Mari (4 August 2011); Sanskrit (5 August 2011); Sinhalese (22 August 2011); Tibetan (14 December 2011); Bavarian (25 December 2011); Ilokano (19 April 2012); Northern Sami (1 July 2012); Dutch Low Saxon (12 September 2012); Võro (7 October 2012); Wu (29 December 2012); Punjabi (17 January 2013); Rusyn / Ruthenian (22 January 2013); North Frisian (1 July 2013)
2,000 Norman (14 November 2006); Friulian (22 April 2007); Bihari (29 April 2007); Novial (19 May 2007); Pali (8 June 2007); Pangasinan (8 July 2007); West Flemish (27 August 2007); Ligurian (2 November 2007); Divehi (28 December 2007); Romansh (29 January 2008); Zazaki (6 February 2008); Wu (17 February 2008); Classical Chinese (26 April 2008); Arpitan / Franco-Provençal (2 May 2008); Maltese (4 May 2008); Manx (17 November 2008); Khmer (27 November 2008); Turkmen (19 April 2009); Kashubian (4 June 2009); Uyghur (17 June 2009); Ladino / Judeo-Spanish (3 July 2009); Ripuarian (5 November 2009); Sardinian (5 December 2009); Anglo-Saxon / Old English (5 April 2010); Hakka (15 August 2010); Cornish (15 November 2010); Pashto (24 November 2010); Meadow Mari (13 April 2011); Udmurt (21 April 2011); Komi (16 May 2011); Navajo (18 May 2011); Komi-Permyak (11 June 2011); Somali (13 June 2011); Saterland Frisian (3 December 2011); Extremaduran (27 December 2011); Silesian (30 December 2011); Zeelandic (16 January 2012); Oriya (17 January 2012); Mingrelian (22 February 2012); Aymara (1 April 2012); Picard (10 June 2012); Gagauz (1 September 2012); Veps (19 September 2012); Guarani (5 November 2012); Interlingue (31 December 2012); Lingala (6 January 2013); Assamese (13 January 2013); Emilian-Romagnol (31 March 2013); Chechen (27 April 2013); Acehnese (15 May 2013);Mirandese (18 September 2013)
1,000 Pennsylvania German (16 October 2006); Tongan (25 April 2007); Hawaiian (9 February 2008); Erzya (16 July 2009); Lojban (26 August 2009); Wolof (27 August 2009); Crimean Tatar (20 October 2009); Assyrian Neo-Aramaic (21 October 2009); Karachay-Balkar (25 April 2010); Kalmyk (8 May 2010); Banjar (30 November 2010); Greenlandic (8 December 2010); Papiamentu (12 December 2010); Kinyarwanda (10 January 2011); Tok Pisin (5 March 2011); Palatinate German (6 June 2011); Lak (24 July 2011); Moksha (30 July 2011); Avar (10 September 2011); Lower Sorbian (28 January 2012); Kabyle (18 February 2012); Shona (8 June 2012); Sranan (26 August 2012); Zamboanga Chavacano (29 September 2012); Lezgian (21 October 2012);Kabardian (25 April 2013); Lao (17 August 2013)
500 Aromanian (31 October 2007); Igbo (5 February 2008); Kongo (1 March 2008); Tahitian (30 April 2010); Abkhazian (24 August 2010); Tetum (27 February 2011); Romani (6 April 2011); Latgalian (18 May 2011); Old Church Slavonic (24 May 2011); Nauruan (3 July 2011); Karakalpak (3 July 2011); Northern Sotho (2 November 2011); Zulu (20 April 2012); Zhuang (1 May 2012); Cheyenne (24 August 2012); Russian Buryat (5 October 2012)
200 Kashmiri (4 October 2004); Moldovan (7 August 2005); Inuktitut (4 February 2007); Sindhi (20 September 2007); Gothic (22 November 2007); Cherokee (20 December 2007); Min Dong (16 June 2008); Bambara (27 June 2008); Samoan (23 August 2008); Oromo (4 September 2008); Pontic (24 May 2009); Norfolk (1 August 2009); Bislama (3 June 2010); Inupiak (8 July 2010); Ewe (15 August 2010); Swati (8 September 2010); Hausa (26 November 2010); Tigrinya (1 December 2010); Tswana (2 November 2011); Tsonga (4 June 2012); Kikuyu (20 July 2012); Fijian (12 November 2012); Venda (16 March 2013); Sango (1 June 2013); Tuvan (11 August 2013); Twi (29 October 2013)
100 Cree (11 November 2006); Xhosa (23 February 2008); Chamorro (16 May 2008); Dzongkha (4 July 2008); Sesotho (9 October 2010); Kirundi (28 November 2010); Luganda (30 November 2010); Chichewa (1 December 2010); Fula (5 December 2010); Tumbuka (5 December 2010); Akan (5 September 2011)

Wiktionaries[edit]

Exact milestone dates shown below are usually based on announcements made on this page. Date ranges are based on the page history of Wiktionary/Table (back to 26 January 2008) or Wiktionary (before that, back to 8 July 2004) and also the saved Wiktionary statistics at wikistatistics.net.

Wiktionaries by entry-count milestone
Milestone Languages (dates milestones reached, in chronological order)
4,000,000
3,000,000 English (23 May 2012)
2,000,000 French (18 April 2011); Malagasy (9 October 2012)
1,500,000
1,000,000
900,000
800,000 Chinese (10 May 2012)
700,000
600,000 Lithuanian (5 January 2012)
500,000
400,000 Russian (10 May 2012); Greek (16 August 2012)
300,000 Turkish (10 May 2012); Swedish (1 September 2012); Polish (22 October 2012); German (24 July 2013); Spanish (26 August 2013)
200,000 Vietnamese (14 October 2006); Tamil (25 May 2011); Kannada (23 March 2012); Dutch (2 July 2012); Ido (18 August 2012); Finnish (24 October 2012); Kurdish (12 January 2013)
150,000 Portuguese (8 May 2010); Hungarian (23–24? July 2010); Korean (26 September 2010)
100,000 Italian (24 May 2009); Norwegian (Bokmål) (10 June 2009); Burmese (23 April 2011); Indonesian (31 December 2011); Malayalam (24 March 2012); Limburgish (19 May 2012); Cherokee (20 August 2013)
90,000 Arabic (14–15? January 2008); Estonian (11 January 2011); Japanese (13 March 2013); Romanian (3 November 2013)
80,000
70,000
60,000 Telugu (17 May 2013)
50,000 Persian (10 May 2012); Czech (17 August 2013); Catalan (22 August 2013)
40,000 Javanese (10 January 2013); Basque (5 June 2013)
30,000 Galician (27–28? September 2010); Ukrainian (10 January 2012); Lao (10 May 2012); Fijian (17 October 2012); Breton (31 May 2013)
20,000 Bulgarian (28 April 2005); Volapük (19–20? July 2007); Icelandic (14 February 2011); Esperanto (21 April 2011); Croatian (29 July 2011); Occitan (2 September 2011); Thai (24 April 2012); Min Nan (4 May 2013); Simple English (23 May 2013); Pashto (17 July 2013); Welsh (26 July 2013)
15,000 Serbian (21–22? February 2009); Sicilian (16–17? March 2010); Tagalog (29 November 2011); Afrikaans (10 May 2012); Asturian (10 April 2013); Uzbek (28 September 2013)
10,000 West Frisian (26–27? April 2009); Swahili (19–20? May 2009); Hebrew (1 April 2010); Norwegian (Nynorsk) (9 August 2012); Danish (8 April 2013); Walloon (6 August 2013); Azerbaijani (29 September 2013)
5,000 Latin (9 September 2004); Slovenian (7 February 2006); Armenian (13 November 2006); Albanian (4–5? July 2008); Tatar (26 August 2008); Georgian (16 August 2011); Latvian (8 October 2011); Urdu (9 December 2011); Luxembourgish (10 May 2012); Hindi (10 May 2012); Western Panjabi (18 May 2012); Samoan (17 October 2012); Nahuatl (1 November 2012); Bosnian (23 November 2012)
2,000 Anglo-Saxon (6–7? June 2007); Kazakh (10–11? March 2008); Upper Sorbian (March–April? 2008); Wolof (11 June 2009); Turkmen (22 June 2009); Corsican (19 May 2010); Khmer (27 February 2011); Belarusian (18 May 2011); Irish (12 June 2011); Malay (10 May 2012); Macedonian (11 May 2012); Slovak (3 September 2012); Kyrgyz (28 December 2012); Low German/Low Saxon (4 April 2013)
1,000 Southern Sotho (25–26? January 2007); Interlingua (6–7? Jaunary 2008); Kashubian (20–21? January 2008); Guarani (1 July 2008); Marathi (26–27? September 2009); Serbo-Croatian (30 October 2011); Sinhalese (10 May 2012); Sanskrit (16 May 2013); Uyghur (19 August 2013)
500 Aragonese (11–12? June 2008); Zulu (11–12? September 2010); Tajik (6 August 2011); Greenlandic (10 May 2012); Sindhi (10 May 2012); Lojban (5 August 2012); Mongolian (20 August 2012); Oriya (17 February 2013); Lingala (27 February 2013); Faroese (18 May 2013)
200 Rwandi (13–14? December 2006); Tsonga (18–19? July 2007); Quechua (19 July 2007); Oromo (20–21? December 2009); Swati (22–23? March 2010); Inuktitut (14–15? June 2010); Cornish (28–29? August 2010); Manx (13–14? September 2010); Aromanian (10 February 2012); Bengali (10 May 2012); Gujarati (10 May 2012); Interlingue (10 May 2012); Amharic (5 July 2012); Somali (7 July 2012); Maltese (16 September 2012); Punjabi (8 December 2012); Venetian (17 May 2013)
100 Yiddish (9–15? November 2005); Scottish Gaelic (27 June 2007); Divehi (18–19? July 2009); Tok Pisin (4–5? August 2009); Sango (7 February 2010); Inupiak (10–11? June 2010); Maori (15–16? June 2010); Zhuang (27–28? July 2010); Nauruan (3 December 2011); Tswana (4 December 2011); Sundanese (10 May 2012); Tigrinya (10 May 2012); Nepali (7 April 2013)

Wikiquotes[edit]

Exact milestone dates shown below are usually from announcements made on this page. Date ranges are based on the page history of Wikiquote/Table (back to 24 September 2008) or Wikiquote (before that).

Wikiquotes by page-count milestone
Milestone Languages (dates milestones reached, in chronological order)
30,000
20,000 English (7 June 2011); Polish (21 November 2012)
15,000 Italian (14 August 2012)
10,000
5,000 German (9 March 2006); Portuguese (16–26? July 2008); Russian (6–11? January 2010); Spanish (25 November 2011); French (10 February 2012); Czech (11 June 2013)
2,000 Bulgarian (23 September 2005); Slovak (17 May 2006); Bosnian (15 June 2006); Slovenian (3 September 2006); Turkish (28 March? – 4 April? 2008); Hebrew (23 August? – 5 September? 2010); Esperanto (19 April 2011); Lithuanian (11 March 2012); Ukrainian (4 February 2013)
1,000 Chinese (26 May 2007); Greek (20 August 2009); Persian (21 August? – 6 September? 2009); Hungarian (9 September 2009); Indonesian (20–24? May 2010); Swedish (14 November 2010); Finnish (14–17? November 2010); Dutch (7–28? February 2011); Limburgish (5 July 2012); Catalan (28 May 2013)
500 Japanese (5 May 2006); Norwegian (bokmål) (1 February? – 5 March? 2007); Hungarian (27 March 2007); Simple English (29 August 2009); Armenian (10 September 2009); Norwegian (nynorsk) (31 January? – 5 February? 2010); Estonian (7–11? March 2010); Arabic (17 June 2011); Azerbaijani (7 July 2011); Croatian (13 May 2012); Malayalam (11 October 2012); Korean (11 December 2012); Sanskrit (7 February 2013)
200 Kurdish (29 July? – 29 August? 2006); Romanian (5 September? – 2 October? 2007); Galician (7–13? December 2007); Georgian (2–6? May 2008); Serbian (21 June? – 19 July? 2009); Welsh (5–8? February 2010); Icelandic (2 March 2011); Thai (6 July 2011); Telugu (24 November 2011); Basque (1 February 2013); Danish (29 May 2013)
100 Vietnamese (3 March 2007); Latin (9 July 2007); Afrikaans (10 July 2007); Albanian (16 January 2008); Hindi (2 January? – 7 February? 2011); Tamil (16 February 2012)

Wikibooks[edit]

Exact milestone dates shown below are usually from announcements made on this page. Date ranges are based on the page history of Wikibooks/Table.

Wikibooks by book module count milestone
Milestone Languages (dates milestones reached, in chronological order)
50,000
40,000 English (10 January 2012)
30,000
20,000 German (10 March 2013)
15,000 French (18 June 2013)
10,000 Hungarian (7 February 2012)
5,000 Portuguese (28 July? – 18 August? 2007); Japanese (21 August? – 6 September? 2009); Spanish (28 March? – 4 April? 2010); Dutch (11–21? April 2010); Polish (28–30? June 2010); Italian (11 May 2011); Vietnamese (24 June 2012); Hebrew (28 September 2013)
2,000 Albanian (24 April 2008); Finnish (18–24? November 2009); Catalan (30 December 2011); Indonesian (22 September 2012)
1,000 Croatian (6 September 2008); Russian (17–21? January 2009); Czech (3–18? April 2009); Chinese (3–16? October 2009); Swedish (8–17? February 2010); Turkish (10 October 2010); Danish (4–7? February 2011); Korean (20 April 2011); Persian (2 March 2012); Thai (11 October 2012); Norwegian (Bokmål) (15 March 2013)
500 Macedonian (22–27? May 2006); Icelandic (13–22? September 2008); Tagalog (12–20? November 2008); Serbian (24–26? March 2009); Arabic (29 November? – 12 December? 2009); Galician (4–11? April 2010); Tamil (28 August 2011); Romanian (21 December 2012)
200 Esperanto (24–26? July 2006); Georgian (4 April? – 9 May? 2007); Lithuanian (24 June? – 12 July? 2007); Bulgarian (11–16? January 2007); Simple English (19 August? – 9 September? 2007); Slovak (25 November 2007? – 26 January 2008?); Greek (16–22? October 2009); Ukrainian (12–20? December 2009); Sinhalese (24–27? June 2010); Limburgian (13 November? – 12 December? 2010); Tatar (4–7? February 2011); Azeri (24 March 2011); Slovenian (20 June 2011); Armenian (3 January 2012); Malay (9 May 2013)
100 Anglo-Saxon (27 October 2005); Interlingua (12–28? July 2007); Marathi (12–28? July 2007); Estonian (9 September? – 2 October? 2007); Occitan (25 November 2007? – 26 January 2008?); Urdu (16–17? April 2008); Latin (17–19? April 2008); Chuvash (3–18? April 2009); Malayalam (6–23? September 2009); Bengali (4–7? February 2011); Hindi (8 August 2011); Kazakh (7 April 2012); Khmer (7 March 2013)

Wikisources[edit]

Exact milestone dates shown below are usually from announcements made on this page. Date ranges are based on the page history of Wikisource/Table (back to 24 September 2008) or Wikisource (before that).

Wikisources by text-unit-count milestone
Milestone Languages (dates milestones reached, in chronological order)
1,500,000
1,000,000 French (10 May 2012); English (29 October 2013)
900,000
800,000
700,000
600,000
500,000
400,000
300,000 German (21 June 2013)
200,000 Russian (1 April 2012)
150,000
100,000 Chinese (11–21? April 2010); Italian (10 May 2012); Polish (23 November 2012); Hebrew (17 September 2013)
90,000 Portuguese (10 May 2012)
80,000 Spanish (3 July 2013)
70,000
60,000 Swedish (21 April 2013)
50,000
40,000
30,000
20,000 Persian (3 September 2011); Hungarian (10 May 2012); Catalan (10 March 2013); Czech (25 May 2013)
15,000 Arabic (10 May 2012)
10,000 Multilingual (16–23? September 2009); Korean (20 August 2012); Slovenian (16 July 2013)
5,000 Croatian (19 August? – 28 September? 2006); Romanian (14 February? – 20 March? 2007); Telugu (26 August? – 25 September? 2007); Finnish (17–21? January 2009); Bengali (28 July? – 1 August? 2010); Vietnamese (26 February 2011); Sanskrit (6 February 2012); Greek (10 February 2012); Thai (10 May 2012); Serbian (9 July 2012); Norwegian (Bokmål) (25 January 2013); Armenian (16 February 2013)
2,000 Latin (12–19? July 2007); Japanese (24 September? – 11 October? 2008); Malayalam (2–17? August 2009); Yiddish (25 October? – 23 November? 2009); Dutch (10 May 2012); Turkish (10 May 2012); Venetian (10 May 2012); Breton (19 June 2012); Ukrainian (22 June 2012); Esperanto (28 October 2012); Gujarati (22 January 2013); Tamil (3 February 2013); Icelandic (11 March 2013); Indonesian (29 August 2013); Belarusian (31 August 2013)
1,000 Danish (22 August? – 1 September? 2010); Limburgian (10 May 2012); Macedonian (10 May 2012); Estonian (28 September 2013)
500 Bulgarian (1–19? September 2010); Sakha (1 April 2011); Alemannic (30 May 2012); Bosnian (6 June 2012); Marathi (14 July 2012); Marathi (15 February 2013)
200 Kannada (12–19? July 2007); Lithuanian (25 August? – 13 September? 2008); Galician (20 March? – 18 April? 2009); Azeri (10 May 2012)
100 Welsh (10 May 2012)

Wikinews[edit]

Exact milestone dates shown below are usually from announcements made on this page. Date ranges are based on the page history of Wikinews/Table (back to 24 September 2008) or Wikinews (before that).

Wikinews by article-count milestone
Milestone Languages (dates milestones reached, in chronological order)
80,000
70,000 Serbian (21 February 2011)
60,000
50,000
40,000
30,000
20,000
15,000 English (13 July 2009)
10,000 Polish (26 June 2009); German (3–23? January 2011); French (14 April 2011)
5,000 Italian (29 January 2008); Portuguese (14 July 2009); Spanish (3 December 2009); Russian (4 February 2013)
2,000 Swedish (27 March 2006); Japanese (2–7? February 2008); Chinese (25 June 2008); Tamil (23 February 2012); Catalan (18 May 2012); Greek (15 August 2012); Czech (9 May 2013)
1,000 Dutch (31 March 2008); Hebrew (16–20? October 2008); Finnish (10–13? October 2009); Romanian (28 December 2010); Arabic (20 May 2011); Persian (14 July 2011); Bulgarian (5 May 2012); Turkish (27 November 2012); Ukrainian (3 June 2013)
500 Sindhi (1 October 2006? – 10 March 2008?); Norwegian (19–20? February 2009); Hungarian (1 March 2010); Albanian (18–24? March 2011)
200 Bosnian (1–3? November 2010); Korean (30 August 2012); Esperanto (21 June 2013)
100 Thai (24 October? – 24 November? 2007)

Wikiversities[edit]

Exact milestone dates shown below are usually from announcements made on this page. Date ranges are based on the page history of Wikiversity/Table (back to 24 September 2008) or Wikiversity (before that).

Wikiversities by module-count milestone
Milestone Languages (dates milestones reached, in chronological order)
30,000
20,000 English (16 March 2013)
15,000
10,000 French (29 August 2012)
5,000 German (27 October 2012); Multilingual Portal (1 May 2013)
2,000 Russian (18 February 2011); Czech (23 June 2011); Italian (18 May 2013)
1,000 Spanish (7–28? February 2011); Portuguese (10 March 2011)
500 Arabic (17 July 2011); Slovenian (2 April 2012); Swedish (6 February 2013); Finnish (13 March 2013)
200 Greek (4–9? October 2008); Korean (7 February 2013)
100 Japanese (15 August? – 6 September? 2009)

Wikivoyages[edit]

Wikivoyages by article-count milestone
Milestone Languages (dates milestones reached, in chronological order)
30,000
20,000 English (15 January 2013)
15,000
10,000 German (16 May 2013)
5,000
2,000 French (15 January 2013); Italian (15 January 2013); Dutch (15 January 2013); Portuguese (15 January 2013); Polish (15 February 2013); Russian (25 July 2013)
1,000 Spanish (15 January 2013); Swedish (15 January 2013); Vietnamese (11 August 2013); Hebrew (27 September 2013)
500 Romanian (18 February 2013)
200 Ukrainian (28 March 2013)
100 Greek (1 June 2013)

Wikimedia Commons[edit]

Commons (multilingual) media-file counts
Milestone Dates milestones reached
16,000,000 1 February 2013 (Wikimedia News item)
15,000,000 4 December 2012 (Wikimedia News item)
14,000,000 22 September 2012 (Wikimedia News item)
13,000,000 5 June 2012 (Wikimedia News item)
12,000,000 13 January 2012 (Wikimedia News item)
11,000,000 15 September 2011 (Village Pump announcement)
10,000,000 16 April 2011 (press release)
9,000,000 23 February 2011
5,000,000 2 September 2009
4,000,000 4 March 2009 (press release)
3,500,000 19 November 2008
3,000,000 16 July 2008 (press release)
2,500,000 25 February 2008
2,000,000 8 October 2007 (press release)
1,750,000 11 August 2007
1,700,000 late July 2007
1,600,000 1 July 2007
1,500,000 25 May 2007 (Wikimedia News item)
1,000,000 30 November 2006 (press release)
600,000 15 May 2006 (Wikimedia News item)
500,000 25 March 2006
100,000 24 May 2005 (press release)
1,000 5 October 2004 (Wikimedia News item)
(creation) 7 September 2004 (Wikimedia News item)

Wikispecies[edit]

Wikispecies (multilingual) content-page counts
Milestone Dates milestones reached
350,000 13 January 2013 (Village Pump announcement)
300,000 22 October 2011
250,000 January 2011
200,000 10 October 2009
150,000 8 September 2008 (Village Pump announcement)
100,000 20 May 2007 (announcement)
75,000 10 October 2006 (Village Pump announcement)
(creation) 13 September 2004 ([1])

Wikidata[edit]

Wikidata (multilingual) item counts
Milestone Dates milestones reached
10,000,000 15 April 2013
5,000,000 2 March 2013
4,000,000 15 February 2013
3,000,000 24 January 2013
2,000,000 4 January 2013
1,000,000 15 December 2012
50,000 14 November 2012
30,000 12 November 2012
20,000 10 November 2012
10,000 3 November 2012
(creation) 30 October 2012 News announcement

See also[edit]