[
US
/ˌɛspɝˈæntoʊ/
]
NOUN
- an artificial language based as far as possible on words common to all the European languages
How To Use Esperanto In A Sentence
- Bits of Incubus, the 1965 horror flick filmed in Esperanto and starring William Shatner. GreenCine Daily: Shorts, 3/28.
- Guidolon (freaked, to camera, in Esperanto): There's ... Oh great lj overmind
- Esperanto also has a highly productive system of constructing new words from old ones.
- As we speak, Esperanto is being corrupted by upstart languages such as Interlingua, Klingon, Java & various cryptophasic tongues.
- Along with his hopes of making Astana a world-class capital, Nazarbayev has also proposed the creation of a new universal currency, called the akmetal from the Greek word acme to replace the dollar in international commerce, a sort of monetary Esperanto. Slate Magazine
- No, but I could say something else in Esperanto …. Last night’s entertainment…Star Trek IV
- You select an Esperanto phrase, then hear the phrase as spoken by a native speaker.
- Esperanto See under language: artificial language.
- Of course Declaration of Human Rights should be read in Esperanto Web Translations » Blog Archive » Most translated document?
- What I ask for is someone to point to an actual study made investigating esperantos "learnability" for learners with different starting points. Languagehat.com: REPRESSIVE ESPERANTO.