Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Esperanto
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Remove ads
English
Etymology
A learned borrowing from Esperanto Esperanto. Originally, this was the pseudonym assumed by the creator of the language, L. L. Zamenhof, and the language was called Lingvo Internacia (“international language”). The term first appears in the publication Science in 1892.
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Esperanto
- An international auxiliary language designed by L. L. Zamenhof.
- 2024 April 16, Rebecca Bettencourt (jan Lepeka), et al., “Preliminary proposal to encode sitelen pona in the UCS”, in Unicode, pages 2-3:
- Speakers of toki pona have formed a large online community. On Discord, the largest toki pona community claims approximately 13,000 members (as of February 1, 2024), more than the largest Na’vi community at approximately 9,600 members, the largest Interslavic community at approximately 8,000 members, or the largest Esperanto community at approximately 7,400 members.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Esperanto.
- (figuratively) Anything that is used as a single international medium in place of plural distinct national media.
- The U.S. dollar is the Esperanto of currency.
- 1923, Edward Sims Van Zile, “The Movie as a World Language”, in That Marvel—the Movie, page 193:
- [Compared] to the Esperanto of the Eye, [cinema], [Esperanto's] conquest of the Earth is painfully slow[.]
- 1994, Terry Pratchet, Interesting Times:
- […] making its usual explicit request in the Esperanto of brutality.
- 2021 January 5, Peter Foster, “Peter Foster: Sustainable Newspeak by 2050”, in Financial Post:
- The instrument of this dumbing down in Nineteen Eighty-Four was Newspeak, the official language of the English Socialist Party (Ingsoc). Newspeak was a sort of Totalitarian Esperanto that sought gradually to diminish the range of what was thinkable by eliminating, contracting and manufacturing words.
- 2022, James Brooke-Smith, Accelerate!: A History of the 1990s, The History Press, →ISBN:
- There may have been a few slippages when the show's American English was translated for foreign audiences—Alerte à Malibu! Mishmar Ha-Mifratz!—but the theme song was pure Esperanto, a joyous surge of energy and desire that was instantly comprehensible from Quito to Tehran.
Derived terms
Translations
auxiliary language
|
See also
- Category:Esperanto language
- Appendix:Esperanto Swadesh list for a Swadesh list of basic vocabulary words in Esperanto
Further reading
- Reta Vortaro (short : ReVo) a multilingual dictionary with esperanto definitions and translations in many languages. See also ReVo
- ISO 639-1 code eo, ISO 639-3 code epo (SIL)
- Ethnologue entry for Esperanto, epo
- Akademio de Esperanto
Esperanto on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
Remove ads
Bikol Central
Proper noun
Esperanto (Basahan spelling ᜁᜐ᜔ᜉᜒᜍᜈ᜔ᜆᜓ)
- Esperanto (auxiliary language)
Dutch
Etymology
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Esperanto n
Derived terms
Esperanto
Etymology
From Doktoro Esperanto ("Doctor Hopeful"), the pen-name of Esperanto's author, Dr. Ludwik Łazarz Zamenhof, when he published the language in 1887; from esperanto (“one who hopes”), from the verb esperi (“to hope”), from French espérer, Spanish esperar, ultimately from Latin spērō (“to hope”).
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Esperanto (accusative Esperanton)
Derived terms
- esperanta (“of or relating to Esperanto”)
- esperantano (“proponent of Esperanto”)
- Esperantido (“offshoot of Esperanto”)
- esperantigi (“to translate or transliterate to Esperanto”)
- Esperantio, Esperantujo (“notional land of Esperantists”)
- esperantismo (“the ideal of a neutral, universal auxiliary language”)
- esperantistiĝi (“to become an Esperantist”)
- esperantisto (“active user of Esperanto, Esperantist”)
- esperantologio (“linguistic study of Esperanto, Esperantology”)
- esperantologo (“specialist in Esperantology, an Esperantologist”)
- esperantumado (“use of Esperanto, Esperanto-related activities”)
Remove ads
German
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Esperanto n (proper noun, strong, genitive Esperantos or Esperanto)
Usage notes
- The word can be used with or without a definite article: (Das) Esperanto ist eine Kunstsprache. (“Esperanto is a constructed language.”) The form with no article is generally more common, but the article is necessary in the genitive case (e.g. die Grammatik des Esperanto) and with the preposition in (e.g. die Pluralbildung im Esperanto).
Further reading
- “Esperanto” in Duden online
Remove ads
Ido
Etymology
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Esperanto
Synonyms
Derived terms
- Esperantala
- Esperantisto
- Esperantismo
See also
Interlingua
Noun
Esperanto
Italian
Noun
Esperanto m (uncountable)
See also
Anagrams
Romanian
Noun
Esperanto n (uncountable)
- alternative letter-case form of esperanto
Tagalog
Etymology
Borrowed from Spanish esperanto, from Esperanto Esperanto, from esperanto (“one who hopes”).
Pronunciation
- (Standard Tagalog) IPA(key): /ʔespeˈɾanto/ [ʔɛs.pɛˈɾan̪.t̪o]
- Rhymes: -anto
- Syllabification: Es‧pe‧ran‧to
Proper noun
Esperanto (Baybayin spelling ᜁᜐ᜔ᜉᜒᜇᜈ᜔ᜆᜓ)
- Esperanto (auxiliary language)
Derived terms
- mag-Esperanto
Related terms
Further reading
Remove ads
Turkish
Etymology
Pronunciation
Audio: (file)
Proper noun
Esperanto
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads