RAE

E13985

RAE is the commonly used acronym for the Royal Spanish Academy, the official institution responsible for regulating and overseeing the Spanish language.

Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf cultural institution
language regulator
royal academy
acronymFor Royal Spanish Academy
surface form: Real Academia Española
collaboratesWith national language academies of Spanish-speaking countries
country Spain
fieldOfWork lexicography
linguistics
philology
founder Duke of Escalona
Juan Manuel Fernández Pacheco
Juan Manuel Fernández Pacheco, 8th Marquis of Villena
surface form: Marquis of Villena
foundingDate 1713
fullName Royal Spanish Academy
surface form: Real Academia Española
hasAbbreviation RAE self-link
hasBuilding RAE headquarters in Madrid
hasMemberCount 46 full members (académicos de número)
hasObjective to adapt the Spanish language to the needs of speakers
to ensure the stability of the Spanish language
hasPublication Diccionario de americanismos
Diccionario de la lengua española
Diccionario del estudiante
Diccionario panhispánico de dudas
Nueva gramática de la lengua española
surface form: Gramática de la lengua española

Nueva gramática de la lengua española
Ortografía de la lengua española
hasRoyalPatronage King of Spain
hasWebsite https://www.rae.es
headquartersLocation Madrid
issues grammatical guidelines
linguistic recommendations
official spelling rules
languageOfWorkOrName Spanish
maintains CORPES XXI corpus
CREA corpus
online dictionary of the Spanish language
memberOf Association of Academies of the Spanish Language
surface form: Association of Spanish Language Academies
motto Limpia, fija y da esplendor
officialLanguageRegulated Spanish language
operatesIn Spain
Spanish-speaking countries
parentOrganization Spanish monarchy
surface form: Spanish Crown
responsibleFor standardization of Spanish grammar
standardization of Spanish orthography
standardization of Spanish vocabulary
scope Hispanic world
typeOfOrganization nonprofit institution
usesScript Latin script

Referenced by (4)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.