1. Ale
2. Albira
3. El
4. Ālē
5. Ài ěr
6. Pivo
7. Alē
8. B* (hebrew)
9. Ēru
10. A Lai
11. Eil
12. Cervisia (latin)
13. ōṇlain
14. Alye
15. Ēlē
16. *L* (pashto)
17. El'
18. A*L (sindhi)
19. Beīyr̒
20. UAle
21. Bir
22. U-Ale
Popularity of Use
A % E % I % O % U %
12 54% 14 63% 9 40% 2 9% 3 13%
B % C % D % F % G %
4 18% 1 4% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
H % J % K % L % M %
0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 15 68% 0 0%
N % P % Q % R % S %
1 4% 1 4% 0 0% 6 27% 1 4%
T % V % W % X % Y %
0 0% 2 9% 0 0% 0 0% 2 9%
Z %
0 0%
Popularity of use
68% L: *L* (pashto),
63% E, L: El, Ēlē, El',
54% A, E, L: Ālē, Ale, Alē, A*L (sindhi),
40% I, A, E, L: A Lai, Eil,
27% R, I, A, E, L: Ài ěr,
18% B, R, I, A, E, L: B* (hebrew), Bir, Albira,
13% U, B, R, I, A, E, L: UAle, U-Ale, Ēru,
9% Y, O, V, U, B, R, I, A, E, L: Alye, Beīyr̒,
4% S, C, P, N, Y, O, V, U, B, R, I, A, E, L: Cervisia (latin), ōṇlain, Pivo,
0% Z, X, W, T, Q, M, K, J, H, G, F, D
Conclusion: Earliest Ale is at 68% with *L* from the Pashto (though incomplete and as recent as 63%). Oldest Complete Ales are at 63% with El (Belarusian), Ēlē (Bengali/Nepali) and El' (Russian/Ukrainian).
The consumption of Ale peaks at 54% before sliding into decline at 27%. It spreads again at 18% before leveling off until 9%, dipping slightly before recovering at 4%.
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