Esperanto - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: esperantoEsperanto
An artificial language intended to be universal devised by Dr Zamenhof a Russian who adopted the pseudonym ldquoDr Esperantordquo in publishing his first pamphlet regarding it in 1887 The vocabulary is very largely based upon words common to the chief European languages and sounds peculiar to any one language are eliminated The spelling is phonetic and the accent stress is always on the penult A revised and simplified form called Ido was developed in 1907 but Esperanto remained at the end of the 20th century the most popular aritficial language designed for normal human linguistic communication...
Ido
An artificial international language selected by the ldquoDelegation for the Adoption of an Auxillary International Languagerdquo founded at Paris in 1901 made public in 1907 and subsequently greatly revised and extended by a permanent committee or ldquoAcademyrdquo It is a revised and simplified form of Esperanto It combines systematically the advantages of previous schemes with a thoroughly logical word formation and has neither accented constants nor arbitrarily coined pronominal words For each idea that root is selected which is already most international on the principle of the ldquogreatest facility for the greatest number of peoplerdquo The word ldquoIdordquo means in the language itself ldquooffspringrdquo The official name is ldquoLinguo Internaciona di la Delegitaro Sistema Idordquo...
interlingua
A language used as an intermediate language in translating from a source language to a target language used especially in machine translation by computers as some machine translation systems use Esperanto as an interlingua...
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