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| Esperanto |
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CascoOscuro
Member #4,966
August 2004
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Looks like it is an old discussion in this forum: the date of topics about this are quite old and i can't reply, but now i can bring you my opinion. Well, english is the first language spoken in the world due to economic reasons, and in the past due to social reasons (british imperialism). But, altough english has a relative easy grammar, pronounciation and speech are chaotic and horrible, without rules and "very-fast" sounds. Once upon a time, a person made a language with around 10 grammar rules, where you can build words with basic "root words" without exceptions, well-defined and easy verb forms and a very simple and ruled speech: The Esperanto. Quote: Esperanto was designed to be an international language that everyone could learn, but since it's based on some Latin language (I can't remember which) it's got a lot of unnecessary stuff, like verb conjugation for person etc. So I suggest we make C the world's official language All latin languages and all germanic ones, too. It's a mix. Well, i can say that, in one day, i've learnt the same quantity of Esperanto than 1 week learning english or french. Se mi povus paroli Esperanto, vi ankau. |
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Avenger
Member #4,550
April 2004
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CascoOscuro
Member #4,966
August 2004
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Yes, a perfect language in fact. And very powerful |
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Avenger
Member #4,550
April 2004
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int main() { printf("Dont start a C vs C++ war please..."); }
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Kitty Cat
Member #2,815
October 2002
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Avenger, that's cheating. This is the real way to speak in C: short attention_spans() { you_people_have(yes); return now || feel_matthews_wrath; }
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Avenger
Member #4,550
April 2004
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if(input_is_acceptable()) { return(agree); }
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ReyBrujo
Moderator
January 2001
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Japanese is not as difficult as many thinks. It has a lot of words indeed, but the kanjis are easy to learn once you figure them out and learn to mix them, it has only past and present (future is the -ing form in english), and pronunciation has only a couple of rules -- |
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Ron Ofir
Member #2,357
May 2002
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I totally agree with you, CascoMon! Quote: Se mi povus paroli Esperanto, vi ankau. Esperanto estas tre bela kaj tre facila! Where are you leaning it from? I'm using Lernu! And what does the -us ending mean? Rey: AFAIK, -ing is present progressive, which is used for near future. |
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ReyBrujo
Moderator
January 2001
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Yep, but in japanese it means future. If you are doing something right now, it is present. -- |
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Evert
Member #794
November 2000
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Quote: it's got a lot of unnecessary stuff, like verb conjugation for person
Bleh, if you want a language that is basically dead when it comes to inflexions, stick with English, which doesn't even have a (proper) second person singular anymore. I started to teach myself Czech not too long back and I love it! Three genders (with a distinction between animate and inanimate male nouns), seven cases, modal verbs, four modes... I love it |
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Rash
Member #2,374
May 2002
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Ahem! |
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Johan Halmén
Member #1,550
September 2001
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Go Finnish! 15 cases! OTOH you can form new words out of old ones: (fi: ) järjestys epäjärjestys järjestää järjestelmä järjestelmällistää järjestelmällistyttää järjestelmällistämäisyys järjestelmällistyttämäisyys järjestelmällistyttämättömyys epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyys epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydellä epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydellänsä epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydellänsäkin epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydellänsäkään epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydellänsäkäänkö epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydellänsäkäänköhän ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Years of thorough research have revealed that what people find beautiful about the Mandelbrot set is not the set itself, but all the rest. |
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Rampage
Member #3,035
December 2002
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My eyes hurt so much! Spanish is quite easy compared to that. [edit] The longest word in Spanish is 'anticonstitucionalmente'. It doesn't compare at all. epäjärjestelmällistyttämättömyydellänsäkäänköhän anticonstitucionalmente It's less than half of the letters! -R |
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miran
Member #2,407
June 2002
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Did anyone count how long that last word is? I got lost at around 18 or 20... -- |
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Avenger
Member #4,550
April 2004
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How do you pronounce that last one?
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ReyBrujo
Moderator
January 2001
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Just read it aloud -- |
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Trezker
Member #1,739
December 2001
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It's easy to pronounce finnish, unless you have jumpy eyes. |
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Rampage
Member #3,035
December 2002
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And how do those ¨ affect the sound? -R |
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miran
Member #2,407
June 2002
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Quote: It's pronounced exactly as it's written. How is ä pronounced? What about ö? -- |
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Sporus
Member #3,815
August 2003
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I might add that words that long are far too impractical to use. They're more like jokes for natives too.
</li> Quote: järjestelmällistämäisyys
I think I've never seen a word like that.
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OICW
Member #4,069
November 2003
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Yeah Czech is lovely language [My website][CppReference][Pixelate][Allegators worldwide][Who's online] |
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CascoOscuro
Member #4,966
August 2004
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Quote: Where are you leaning it from? I'm using Lernu! And what does the -us ending mean?
I'm using [url http://www.institutoesperanto.com.ar]. It's argentinian but you can see the page in english. It's cool, and they bring you a diploma if you success an exam (i think it's free, i've sent a email to them asking this question). The us ending means condition. For me, and spanish native speaker, sounds weird at first. Rash, the first web page you show to us is a bit intolerant. I totally disagree its points of view and its reasons. For a international language, Esperanto is perfect. Easy, standard, easy verbs and a ruled pronountiation. Quote: järjestelmällistämäisyys That word makes me afraid. |
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Niunio
Member #1,975
March 2002
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jorram said: My eyes hurt so much! Spanish is quite easy compared to that. And easer to read it: each character has only one sound (except characters "c", "g" "n" and "l") even with quotes: "e" sounds the same than "è" (but with emphasis). ----------------- |
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Oscar Giner
Member #2,207
April 2002
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Quote: except characters "c", "g" "n" and "l"
n and l There's also "r" that sounds like "rr" if it's at the beginning of a word or after consonant (but at least it has precise rules, not like another language I know of but I won't name -- |
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Rampage
Member #3,035
December 2002
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Quote: but at least it has precise rules, not like another language I know of but I won't name
Language recognition would be easier if it was done in Spanish -R |
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