Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first, Esperanto maintains a QWERTY layout, but switches the letters that are not used in Esperanto (q, w, y, and x) for diacritical letters and makes a u into a ŭ if it follows an a or an e. The second method, Esperanto-sc , is more familiar to QWERTY users and allows the user to type in most Latin-scripted languages and Esperanto ...
Cabify was founded in May 2011 by Juan de Antonio, a Spanish entrepreneur, telecommunications engineer. [4] [5] De Antonio was motivated to create a vehicle for hire company after trying unsuccessfully to introduce electric vehicles in European cities.
lernu! is a multilingual, web-based free project for promoting and teaching Esperanto. The name Lernu comes from the imperative form of the Esperanto verb lerni, meaning "to learn". The site is run by E@I, an international youth organization, which started as a working group of the World Esperanto Youth Organization.
Plena Manlibro de Esperanta Gramatiko (PMEG, English: Complete Manual of Esperanto Grammar) is a book which explains Esperanto grammar in an easy-to-learn format. It was mostly written by Bertilo Wennergren [1] and is for ordinary Esperanto speakers who want to study Esperanto's grammar, word construction, writing and pronunciation.
A more recent system for typing in Esperanto is the so-called "x-system", which uses x instead of h for the digraphs, including ux for ŭ. For example, ŝ is represented by sx, as in sxi for ŝi and sxanco for ŝanco. X-digraphs solve those problems of the h-system: x is not a letter in the Esperanto alphabet, so its use introduces no ambiguity.
Bertilo Wennergren—a member of the Akademio de Esperanto, the group which attempts to define standards of good Esperanto usage—has compiled a 25,000-word critique of the 2002 and 2005 editions. (Misprints and erroneous usages from the 2002 edition that were corrected in the subsequent edition have been retained for archival reasons but are ...
The Esperanto Museum and Collection of Planned Languages (German: Esperantomuseum und Sammlung für Plansprachen, Esperanto: Esperantomuzeo kaj kolekto por planlingvoj), commonly known as the Esperanto Museum, is a museum for Esperanto and other constructed languages in Vienna, Austria.
Esperanto [1] [2] is the most widely spoken constructed international auxiliary language. L. Zamenhof , a Polish-Jewish ophthalmologist, created Esperanto in the late 19th century and published the first book detailing it, Unua Libro , in 1887 under the pseudonym Dr. Esperanto, Esperanto translating as "one who hopes".