Esperanto Language
Esperanto Language
Esperanto Language
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanto
Esperanto is an international auxiliary language devised in 1887 by Dr. Ludwig
Lazarus Zamenhof (1859-1917), an eye doctor, under the pseudonym of "Doktoro
Esperanto". He originally called the language "La Internacia Lingvo" (The
International Language), but it soon became known as Esperanto, which means
"the hoping one".
Zamenhof was born in the Polish city of Bialystok which at that time was home to
a polyglot, multiethnic mixture of Poles, Russians, Jews, Lithuanians and
Germans. He believed that much of the distrust and misunderstanding between
the different ethnic groups was a result of language differences, so he resolved to
create an international language which could be used as an neutral lingua franca
and could help break down the language barriers.
Zamenhof's first work on Esperanto, the "Unua Libro" (First Book) published in
1887, contained 920 roots from which tens of thousands of words could be
formed, together with the "Fundamenta Gramatiko" (Fundamental Grammar),
which consisted of 16 basic grammatical rules. Zamenhof renounced all rights to
Esperanto and encouraged comments and suggestions on the development of
the language. The first Universal Esperanto Congress (La Unua Universala
Esperanto Kongreso) was held at Boulogne-sur-Mer in 1905.
The majority of Esperanto roots are based on Latin, though some vocabulary is
taken from modern Romance languages, and from English, German, Polish and
Russian. Roots can be combined with affixes to form new words, for
example: lerni = to learn, lernejo = a school, lernanto = a
pupil/student, lernejestro = a headmaster. The affixes can also stand alone: ejo =
place, estro = leader/head, etc. The grammar has many influences from Slavic
languages, although it is greatly simplified in comparison to them.
Spelling conventions are somewhat similar to Polish, though Zamenhof came up
with some new letters for Esperanto (Ĉĉ, Ĝĝ, Ĥĥ, Ĵĵ, Ŝŝ, Ŭŭ). These letters are
often replaced with ch, gh, jh or cx, gx, jx, or c', g', j', etc. Zamenhof recognised
this problem and favoured using ch, gh, etc when the special letters were not
available.
Today Esperanto is the most widely used international auxiliary language. The
Universal Esperato Association (UEA) / La Universala Esperanto-Asocio has
members in 120 countries, and there are national Esperanto associations in 70
countries. Esperanto is most spoken in Japan, China, France, Germany, Italy,
Poland, the USA, Brazil, Belgium and the UK. The number of Esperanto speakers
is not known for certain, however the UEA estimates that there are hundreds of
thousands and possibly millions of them.
According to Ethnologue, there were about 2 million Esperanto speakers in 2015,
and in 2004 there were about 1,000 native speakers of Esperanto.
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanto
Recordings in the text by Jan Jurčík