Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Esperanto_etymology> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 21 of
21
with 100 items per page.
- Esperanto_etymology abstract "Esperanto vocabulary and grammatical forms derive primarily from the Romance languages, with lesser contributions from Germanic. The language occupies a middle ground between "naturalistic" constructed languages such as Interlingua, which borrow words en masse from their source languages with little internal derivation, and a priori conlangs such as Solresol, in which the words have no historical connection to other languages. In Esperanto, root words are borrowed and retain much of the form of their source language, whether the phonetic form (eks- from international ex-, vualo from French voile) or orthographic form (teamo and boato from English team and boat, soifo from French soif). However, each root can then form dozens of derivations which may bear little resemblance to equivalent words in the source languages, such as registaro (government), which is derived from the Latinate root reg (to rule) but has a morphology closer to German or Russian.".
- Esperanto_etymology wikiPageExternalLink f1.image.
- Esperanto_etymology wikiPageExternalLink 06etimologio.
- Esperanto_etymology wikiPageExternalLink etymological.
- Esperanto_etymology wikiPageExternalLink AILverb.html.
- Esperanto_etymology wikiPageExternalLink langueinternati00courgoog.
- Esperanto_etymology wikiPageExternalLink languenouvelle.
- Esperanto_etymology wikiPageID "881273".
- Esperanto_etymology wikiPageRevisionID "596420480".
- Esperanto_etymology hasPhotoCollection Esperanto_etymology.
- Esperanto_etymology subject Category:Esperanto.
- Esperanto_etymology subject Category:Etymology.
- Esperanto_etymology comment "Esperanto vocabulary and grammatical forms derive primarily from the Romance languages, with lesser contributions from Germanic. The language occupies a middle ground between "naturalistic" constructed languages such as Interlingua, which borrow words en masse from their source languages with little internal derivation, and a priori conlangs such as Solresol, in which the words have no historical connection to other languages.".
- Esperanto_etymology label "Esperanto etymology".
- Esperanto_etymology label "Étymologie de l'espéranto".
- Esperanto_etymology sameAs Étymologie_de_l'espéranto.
- Esperanto_etymology sameAs 에스페란토_어원.
- Esperanto_etymology sameAs Q1056157.
- Esperanto_etymology sameAs Q1056157.
- Esperanto_etymology wasDerivedFrom Esperanto_etymology?oldid=596420480.
- Esperanto_etymology isPrimaryTopicOf Esperanto_etymology.