[Fedora Project Wiki] Update of "Docs/Beats/I18n" by PaulFrields

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The following page has been changed by PaulFrields:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Docs/Beats/I18n?action=diff&rev2=97&rev1=96

The comment on the change is:
Use DocsDict and editorial pass

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  This section includes information on language support under Fedora.
  
  === Fonts changes ===
- Fonts for Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and some Indic scripts are now installed by default.  Also:
+ Fonts for Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and some Indic scripts are now installed by default.  The following changes also appear in Fedora [[GetVal(DocsDict,BeatsVer)]]:
  
-  * `cjkunifonts-fonts` has been split out of fonts-chinese into two subpackages for the Uming and Ukai faces.
+  * `cjkunifonts-fonts` has been split out of `fonts-chinese` into two subpackages for the Uming and Ukai faces.
-  * `sazanami-fonts` has been split out of fonts-japanese into two subpackages for the Gothic and Mincho faces.
+  * `sazanami-fonts` has been split out of `fonts-japanese` into two subpackages for the Gothic and Mincho faces.
   * `wqy-bitmap-fonts` is now installed by default under Chinese support.
  
  === Language Installation ===
@@ -21, +21 @@

  
  In the command above, `<language>` is one of `assamese`, `bengali`, `chinese`, `gujarati`, `hindi`, `japanese`, `kannada`, `korean`, `malayalam`, `marathi`, `oriya`, `punjabi`, `sinhala`, `tamil`, `telegu`, or `thai`.
  
- Users upgrading from earlier releases of Fedora are strongly recommended to install `scim-bridge-gtk`, which works well with 3rd party C++ applications linked against older versions of `libstdc++`.
+ Users upgrading from earlier releases of Fedora are strongly recommended to install `scim-bridge-gtk`, which works well with third-party C++ applications linked against older versions of `libstdc++`.
  
  If you just want to install SCIM support to input a particular language you can instead just install `scim-lang-<lang>`, where `<lang>` is one of `assamese`, `bengali`, `chinese`, `dhivehi`, `farsi`, `gujarati`, `hindi`, `japanese`, `kannada`, `korean`, `latin`, `malayalam`, `marathi`, `oriya`, `punjabi`, `sinhalese`, `tamil`, `telugu`, `thai`, `tibetan`.
  
  === SCIM Input Method defaults ===
- The core SCIM input method packages are now installed by default, but the input method only starts by default on desktops running in an Asian locale (the current list is: `as`, `bn`, `gu`, `hi`, `ja`, `kn`, `ko`, `ml`, `mr`, `ne`, `or`, `pa`, `si`, `ta`, `te`, `th`, `ur`, `vi`, `zh`).  You can use `im-chooser` via ''System -> Preferences -> Personal -> Input Method'' to enable or disable SCIM on your desktop, or to select other installed input methods.  In a non-Asian locale you need to set ''Use custom input method -> scim'' in `im-chooser` and restart your desktop session to activate SCIM on your desktop by default.
+ The core SCIM input method packages are now installed by default, but the input method only starts by default on desktops running in an Asian locale.  The current locale list is: `as`, `bn`, `gu`, `hi`, `ja`, `kn`, `ko`, `ml`, `mr`, `ne`, `or`, `pa`, `si`, `ta`, `te`, `th`, `ur`, `vi`, `zh`.  You can use `im-chooser` via ''System -> Preferences -> Personal -> Input Method'' to enable or disable SCIM on your desktop, or to select other installed input methods.  In a non-Asian locale, you must set ''Use custom input method -> scim'' in `im-chooser` and restart your desktop session to activate SCIM on your desktop by default.
  
  The following table lists the default trigger hotkeys for different languages:
  

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