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Most of its vocabulary is made up of Latin, Greek, English, French, German, and some other Indo-European roots with a few words from Slavic languages. Esperanto has a relatively regular grammar, phonetic alphabet (meaning that all words are pronounced as in written and vice versa), and very logical structure (the same words' ending for the same parts of speech, e.g. -o for nouns, -a for adjectives, etc.). All these features make Esperanto easier to learn than most of the world's languages, even for non-Europeans, though particular features may be more or less advantageous to native speakers of particular languages. The alphabet includes new letters that are not found on any national keyboard, which is overcome by use of the h-system, x-system, or Unicode. (See Esperanto orthography.) Other languages, like Chinese, have similar problems.
| Table of contents |
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2 Pronouns 3 Correlatives 4 Affixes 5 Numbers 6 Grammar examples 7 Comparisons 8 See also 9 External links |
In Esperanto, the endings -o, -a, and -e indicate noun, adjective, and adverb, respectively. When a -j follows those endings, it makes the word plural. Direct objects must have the -n ending, which goes after the plural ending, if any.
Adjectives must have plural ending if the noun it describes also has the plural ending. The same goes for the accusative ending. Compare "bona tagojn" (incorrect) with "bonajn tagojn" (correct). Zamenhof later regretted making that requirement. Also to Zamenhof's regret, a limited number of adverbs do not end with -e (See special Esperanto adverbs).
{|
|mi
|I
|-
|vi
|you
|-
|li
|he
|-
|ŝi
|she
|-
|ili
|they
|-
|oni
|one
|-
|ni
|we
|-
|it
|ĝi
|}
Pronouns may take the accusative -n ending. For example, min means me, lin means him, and ŝin means her. Possessive pronouns are formed with the adjectival -a ending. For example, mia means my, ĝia means its, and nia means our.
Esperantists use correlatives to ask and answer questions about what, how, why, etc.
{|
|
!Question
!Pointer
!Indefinite
!Universal
!Negative
|-
!Individual
|kiu
|tiu
|iu
|ĉiu
|neniu
|-
!Thing
|kio
|tio
|io
|ĉio
|nenio
|-
!Kind
|kia
|tia
|ia
|ĉia
|nenia
|-
!Place
|kie
|tie
|ie
|ĉie
|nenie
|-
!Motion
|kien
|tien
|ien
|ĉien
|nenien
|-
!Time
|kiam
|tiam
|iam
|ĉiam
|neniam
|-
!Amount
|kiom
|tiom
|iom
|ĉiom
|neniom
|-
!Manner
|kiel
|tiel
|iel
|ĉiel
|neniel
|-
!Reason
|kial
|tial
|ial
|ĉial
|nenial
|-
!Possession
|kies
|ties
|ies
|ĉies
|nenies
|-
|}
Often used with the correlatives, the word ajn decreases specificity, and the word ĉi increases proximity.
Esperanto uses affixes to decrease the number of words that must be learned. Prefixes go before a root, affixes go after. When a root recieves more than one suffix, the order of the suffixes does matter, because suffixes closer to the root have more to do with the root.
Sometimes affixes act as roots. For example, mala means opposite, and eta means small. Also, roots sometimes act as suffixes: vidi - "to see", vidpova - "not blind".
Esperanto suffixes are not only used for grammatical inflections, but for expansion of vocabulary from a relatively few basic words:
Prefixes are similarly used for vocabulary expansion. For example, antonyms are very rarely based on separate roots but are formed by use of the negating prefix "mal-":
{|
|bo-
|relation by marriage, "in-law"
|bopatrino: mother-in-law; bofrato: brother-in-law
|-
|ĉef-
|head, chief
|ĉefurbo: capital; ĉefministro: prime minister
|-
|dis-
|separation, scattering
|disĵeti: to throw about; dissendi: to distribute
|-
|ek-
|sudden or momentary action
|ekbrili: to flash; ekkrii: to shout out
|-
|ge-
|of unspecified gender
|gepatro: parent; gesinjoroj: ladies and gentlemen
|-
|mal-
|opposite
|granda: big, malgranda: small; riĉa: rich, malriĉa: poor
|-
|re-
|over again, back again
|resendi: to send back; rekonstrui: to rebuild
|
|}
Participles, like tenses use the vowels i, a and o to indicate past, present and future time, respectively.
Example: esperinto=former hoper.
Passive participles are formed like active participle, except the n is omitted (infixes -it-, -at-, -ot-).
Ordinal numbers are formed by adding the adjective -a ending:
esperanta(n) Hoping - nominative (accusative) adjective
esperantaj(n) Hoping - nominative (accusative) adjective, plural
esperanto(n) Hoper - nominative (accusative) noun
esperantoj(n) Hopers - nominative (accusative) noun
pli means more, and plej means most. Derived using the \mal- prefix, malpli means less, and malplej means least. Phrases like "The more people, the smaller the portions." and "All the better!" are translated using ju and des in place of the: "Ju pli da homoj, des malpli grandaj la porcioj.", and "Des pli bona!".
A fairly good overview of Esperanto's grammar and word-building system can be gained by viewing "The Sixteen Rules of Esperanto", "The Esperanto Correlatives" and "Word Building With Esperanto Affixes"
Word endings
Pronouns
Correlatives
Enumeration of combinations
Affixes
Suffixes
esperantino Hoper, female
Esperantujo "Esperantoland" (wherever Esperanto is being spoken)
esperiga Hope-inspiring (giving hope)
senespera Hopeless
{|
| -adi
|to do an action persistently or repeatedly
|kuradi: to keep on running; vizitadi: to visit habitually
|-
| -ado
|frequent or continuous action
|kuirado: cooking; parolado: speech
|-
| -aĵo
| thing, substance
| novaĵo: news, novelty; manĝaĵo: food
|-
| -ano
|member, inhabitant
|Usonano: American; Kristano: Christian
|-
| -aro
|collection, group
|-arbaro: forest; vortaro: dictionary|
|-
| -ebla
|possible
|-videbla: visible; kredebla: credible|
|-
| -eco
|abstract quality
|-boneco: goodness; amikeco: friendship
|-
| -eg-
|great size, intense degree, augmentative
|domego: mansion; varmega: extremely hot|
|-ejo
|place
|lernejo: school; vendejo: store|
|-
| -ema
|propensity, tendency
|parolema: talkative; ludema: playful
|-
| -estro
|leader, chief
|lernejestro: school principal; urbestro: mayor
|-
| -et-
|smallness, small degree, diminutive
|varmeta: lukewarm; libreto: booklet
|-
| -ido
|child, descendent
|katido: kitten; reĝo: king, reĝido: prince
|-
| -igi
|to make, to cause to become
|purigi: to clean; mortigi: to kill
|-
| -iĝi
|to become
|naskiĝi: to be born; edziĝi: to marry (become a husband)
|-
| -ilo
|tool, instrument
|tranĉilo: knife; ludilo: a toy
|-
| -inda
|worthy of
|memorinda: memorable; vidinda: worth seeing
|-
| -ino
|feminine
|patrino: mother; bovino: cow
|-
| -ismo
|-doctrine, system (as in English)
|-komunismo: communism; kristanismo: Christianity
|-
| -isto
|person connected with something (as in English)
|instruisto: teacher; komunisto: communist
|-
| -obla
|multiple
|-duobla: double; trioble: triply
|-
| -ona
|fraction
|duona: half (of); centono: one hundredth
|-
| -ujo
|container, country
|monujo: purse; Anglujo: England (now often "-io" in this sense)
|-
| -ulo
|person possessing a quality or characteristic
|riĉulo: rich man; junulo: young person
|-
| -um-
|indefinite suffix indicating some relation with the root
|kolumo: collar; malvarmumo: a cold; plenumi: to fulfill
|}Prefixes
dekstren Towards the right
maldekstren Towards the left
supren Upwards
malsupren DownwardsThis reduces the number of root forms to be learned. However, the prefix mal- almost always occurs in an unstressed position (such as the words above), which can lead to many similar-sounding words with opposite meanings. Despite this problem, Esperanto is sometimes presented as a solution to the many airplane crashes which arise due to misunderstandings of English.Participles
Numbers
Integers
There exist multiple systems for writing numbers above 1,000 in Esperanto. Using one system:
Ordinals
Fractions
Multiples
File
Grammar examples
esperi To hope
esperas Hopes, is hoping, does hope
esperis Hoped, was hoping, did hope
esperos Shall or will hope
esperu Hope! (volitive)
esperus Were to hope, would hope (conditional)
The -ant- suffix in the above examples indicates present active participle.Comparisons
See also
External links