# Get A List Of Locales On Your System The `locale -a` command will list all the available locales on your system. You'll see a giant list that probably includes these and many more values. ```bash $ locale -a en_NZ nl_NL.UTF-8 pt_BR.UTF-8 fr_CH.ISO8859-15 eu_ES.ISO8859-15 en_US.US-ASCII af_ZA bg_BG cs_CZ.UTF-8 fi_FI zh_CN.UTF-8 eu_ES sk_SK.ISO8859-2 nl_BE fr_BE sk_SK en_US.UTF-8 ... ``` Each of these locales identifies itself by the language and the manner in which the language is used in a particular place. For example, `en_NZ` is _English as it is spoken in New Zealand_. `fr_BE` is _French as it is spoken in Belgium_. `en_US.UTF-8` is _English as it is spoken in the US, with a UTF-8 character set encoding_. [source](https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/locale.html#LOCALE-OVERVIEW)