Friday, 9 August 2013

Esperanto II

As we saw yesterday, it was Zamenhof’s childhood dream for there to be an international common language. Therefore, he brought it upon himself to create one. This was an incredibly difficult task because it must be easy for children to learn as a second language, no matter what their mother tongue was.

He began to consider rejuvenating Latin and encouraging schools to teach it. But he found learning Latin very complicated. Therefore, he created a new language based on existing languages to form an orderly language system.
Phonetics
Esperanto has 28 letters in the alphabet:
However, if a computer is unable to put circumflexes or breves onto the letters, an ‘x’ is placed after the letter to signify the same thing. I.e. cx can be used to mean ĉ  
Stress is always placed on the second to last vowel, unless the last vowel is elided with the following word. In this case, the last vowel has the stress. Even though tone is important in Esperanto, like most language, words cannot normally be differentiated by the tone.

Vocabulary
Most vocabulary is based on Romance languages and therefore very similar to Latin, French and Spanish. For example, the word for house is ‘domo’ which is derived from the Latin ‘domus’ and the Italian ‘domestico’. This similarity is thought to be the reason why if school students are taught a year of Esperanto and then three of French, they will reach a much higher level of French than other students who spend 4 years learning French.
Words are formed by adding prefixes and suffixes to roots. For example the suffix -aĉ- can be added near the end of a root to form a pejorative (expresses negative opinion of an object). An example of this is ‘domaĉo’ which means a shack (instead of ‘domo’ – home).
Zamenhof published a dictionary in 1894 containing 9,000 roots. However, these could form hundreds of thousands when suffixes and prefixes are added.
Grammar
Since Esperanto was created by man, it is very regular and contains a simple grammar system. A similarity to Latin and German is that Esperanto has cases – but only the subject and object.
For example:

Nouns
Subject
Object
Singular
-o
-on
Plural
-oj
-ojn

Esperanto verbs can only exist in three different tenses: past, present and future. Verbs can also exist in three moods: infinitive, jussive and conditional. The verb does not show person or plurals. For example: the infinitive ‘kanti’ means to sing.

Esperanto
English
Mi kantas
I sing
Vi kantis
You sung
Illi kantos
They will sing


To conclude, although Esperanto was constructed and therefore is not genealogically related to any natural language, it is closely based on many different languages. The vocabulary and grammar is very regular and therefore as long as you learn vocabulary and the basic rules, Esperanto is very easy to learn as a second language.

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