Esperanto
From Wikinfo
[[fr:Esp�ranto]] [[hu:Eszperant� nyelv]]
Esperanto (eo and epo in ISO 639) is the most widely spoken of the constructed languages. L. L. Zamenhof created the foundation of the language in 1887 after working on it for ten years (see Esperanto history). His intention was to create an easy-to-learn language, to serve as an international auxiliary language, a second language for everyone in the world, rather than to replace all existing languages in the world. Some Esperanto speakers still want this, but most just want to meet foreigners and learn about other countries and cultures. Today, thousands of people use it regularly to communicate with people all over the world.
Esperanto has proven to be a good deal easier for speakers of European languages to learn as a second language than any national language (especially highly irregular and/or non-phonetic languages such as English, French, and Chinese). There is also evidence that studying Esperanto before studying any other second language (especially an Indo-European language) speeds and improves learning, because learning subsequent foreign languages is easier than learning one's first, while the use of a grammatically simple auxiliary language lessens the "first foreign language" learning hurdle. In one study (Williams 1965), a group of high school students studied Esperanto for one year, then French for three years, and ended up with a better command of French than the control group, who studied French without Esperanto during all four years.
A survey of the number of Esperanto speakers was conducted by Sidney S. Culbert, a retired psychology professor of the University of Washington, himself a Esperantist who has attended Esperanto congresses, who has commented regarding the logical structure of Esperanto: "If the world could be structured that efficiently", and whose wife Ruth, who has herself written four plays in Esperanto, has commented "It's the only hope for the world or it will be destroyed" ([1]). Culbert concluded that 1.6 million people speak Esperanto to Foreign Service Level 3 ability. This number is limited to those "professionally proficient" (possessing the ability to actually communicate beyond greetings and simple phrases) in Esperanto. This survey did not seek out speakers of Esperanto specifically, but formed a part of a world-wide survey of many languages. This number also appears in the Almanac World Book of Facts, and in Ethnologue. The Ethnologue data may need to be treated with caution, as on their web page they incorrectly categorize Esperanto as a language of France, and also give -al as a dative ending (not quite correct; al is a separate word meaning "to"). Ethnologue also states that there are 200 to 2000 native Esperanto speakers.
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Use of Esperanto versus other planned languages
Some of the other planned languages that have emerged in the twentieth century have attempted to address criticisms of Esperanto. Yet despite its criticisms, no other constructed language has approached the number of Esperanto speakers or has an extensive body of literature like Esperanto. Some of these other languages are quite different from Esperanto while other languages, like Ido, are based on Esperanto, and enjoyed a period of popularity in the early 1900s. More recent spinoffs from Esperanto include the modified form Riismo which seeks to eliminate sexual inequality from the language. Other alternative languages include Idiom Neutral, Occidental, Novial, and Interlingua; some languages not originally intended as international auxiliary languages are also sometimes suggested, such as Lojban. Because Esperanto is the most well-known of constructed languages, many who have been interested were unaware of these other languages, but the Internet offers information about these languages as well.
Alphabet
The phonemic alphabet of Esperanto has six accented letters: ĉ, ĝ, ĥ, ĵ, ŝ (c, g, h, j, and s with circumflex), and ŭ (u with breve). The alphabet does not include the letters q, w, x, and y.
Therefore the alphabet consists of: a b c ĉ d e f g ĝ h ĥ i j ĵ k l m n o p r s ŝ t u ŭ v z
Angoroj (1964) was the first film produced in Esperanto. Incubus (1965, starring William Shatner) is the only known feature film with entirely Esperanto dialogue.
Some phrases
- Hello: Saluton
- How much?: Kiom?
- I like this one: Mi ŝatas ĉi tiun
- Is it cheap?: Ĉu ĝi estas malmultekosta?
- Five euros: Kvin eŭroj
- Do you accept US dollars?: Ĉu vi akceptas usonajn dolarojn?
- Please give me a receipt: Bonvolu doni al mi kvitancon
- Thank you: Dankon
- I love you: Mi amas vin
- Goodbye: Ĝis revido
See also
- Amikeca Reto -- friendship network
- Esperanto culture
- Esperanto grammar
- Esperanto history
- Esperanto library
- Esperanto literature
- Esperanto music
- Elektronika kompilo
- La Espero - Esperanto anthem
- Esperanto orthography
External links
- Free Esperanto course in over 10 languages
- Esperanto.net: information in 57 languages
- Esperanto: A Language for the Global Village by Sylvan Zaft
- Learn Not to Speak Esperanto by Justin Rye
- Free Esperanto Course - Email correspondence course
- Reta vortaro, an Esperanto dictionary
- Esperanto League for North America - US national organization
References
- Williams, N. (1965) 'A language teaching experiment', Canadian Modern Language Review 22.1: 26-28
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Esperanto" http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanto August 31, 2003

