How to use in-sentence of “esperanto”:
+ On the Internet there are many online discussions in Esperanto about different topics.
+ They did not like how Esperanto used letters with special diacritic marks over them, because that made it hard to type, and they thought that a world language should be easy to learn and write.
+ The Esperanto alphabet is based on the Latin script.
+ The letter “x” is not used in the Esperanto alphabet, but it can be used to write diacritics.
+ Feature films in Esperanto are not very common, but there are about 15 feature films, which have Esperanto themes.
Example sentences of “esperanto”:
+ Most sources say that there are between several hundred thousand and two million Esperanto speakers.
+ The letter ĥ is the least used letter in Esperanto and ĵ is not used frequently either, leading people to question how necessary they are.
+ The 1966 film "Incubus Incubus" is notable because its dialogues are in Esperanto only.
+ Most sources say that there are between several hundred thousand and two million Esperanto speakers.
+ The letter ĥ is the least used letter in Esperanto and ĵ is not used frequently either, leading people to question how necessary they are.
+ The 1966 film “Incubus Incubus” is notable because its dialogues are in Esperanto only.
+ People can also use an Esperanto version of social networks, for example Facebook, Diaspora and other websites.
+ Part of the reason was that Esperanto is easier to learn with a simpler grammar.
+ He wrote something showing that Esperanto was good for learning other languages.
+ The basic symbol of Esperanto is the green five-pointed star.
+ The language has got common attributes with isolating languages such as Chinese languageChinese, while the inner structure of Esperanto words has got common attributes with Turkish, Swahili and Japanese.
+ However, Esperanto was never chosen by the United Nations or other international organizations and it has not become a widely accepted second language.
+ An Esperanto Museum was opened in Vienna, Austria, in 1929.
+ Some Esperanto speakers like Esperanto for reasons other than its use as a universal second language.
+ In other words, although he did not want Esperanto to replace national languages, he wanted a majority of people around the world to speak Esperanto.
+ Because the manifesto shows advantages of accepting of Esperanto as international auxiliary language, people consider it as the modern manifesto of finvenkism.
+ Universal Esperanto Association is the largest organization of Esperanto speakers.
+ Much literature has been translated into Esperanto from other languages, including famous works, like the Bible and plays by Shakespeare.
+ There are not very many native Esperanto speakers.
+ In 1912 Zamenhof resigned his leading position in the movement during the eighth World Congress of Esperanto in Kraków, Poland.
More in-sentence examples of “esperanto”:
+ Among active Esperanto musicians is for example SwedenSwedish socio-critical music group “La Perdita Generacio”, Occitan singer “JoMo”, the Finnish group “Dolchamar”, Polish singer-songwriter Georgo Handzlik.
+ Criticism of some parts of Esperanto motivated the creation of various new constructed languages like Ido, Novial, Interlingua and Lojban.
+ The basics of Esperanto were published in 1887.
+ At the location of Esperanto meetings there is also a pub, a tearoom, a bookstore, etc.
+ Akademio de Esperanto is an Independenceindependent organisation, which is guarding the development of the constructed language Esperanto.
+ A person who speaks or supports Esperanto is often called an “Esperantist”.
+ Since Esperanto has more speakers than Ido, most people that know Ido first learned Esperanto and then later learned that Ido is a language, too.
+ It refers to a theoretical future in which nearly everyone on Earth speaks Esperanto as a second language.
+ A poetic version in Esperanto was translated by Viktor Jaskovec and Volodymyr Pacjurko in 1991.
+ According to some people, the phonetic system of Esperanto is too similar to the Polish dialect of Białystok, home town of Zamenhof.
+ This was the first notable use of Esperanto in international communication.
+ Filmmakers sometimes use Esperanto in the background of films, for example in “The Great Dictator” by Charlie Chaplin, in the action film “Blade: Trinity” or in comedy sci-fi television series “Red Dwarf”.
+ His goal was to design Esperanto in such a way that people can learn it much more easily than any other national language.
+ NazismNazis broke up Esperanto groups because they saw the language as a part of a worldwide Jewish conspiracy.
+ Critics of Esperanto English, for example, does not have the requirement that an adjective and noun must agree in tense, and has no indicator for accusative cases.
+ In the first years of Esperanto‘s life, people used it only in written form, but in 1905 they organized the first World Congress of Esperanto in Boulogne-sur-Mer, France.
+ There are people who speak Esperanto in many countries and in all the major continents.
+ However, none of these constructed languages have as many speakers as Esperanto does.
+ Internet radio station “Muzaiko” has been broadcasting 24hours a day in Esperanto since 2011.
+ The whole Esperanto alphabet is part of the ISO 8859-3Latin-3 and Unicode character sets, and it is included in WGL4.
+ He thought people should learn it along with national languages and use Esperanto for communication between people with different native languages.
+ During the hundredth anniversary of Esperanto in 1987, World Esperanto Association has made this special logo.
+ He wanted Esperanto to be a universal second language.
+ He thought that this was because Esperanto needed to be remade in a different way.
+ Volapük became less popular after 1887 when Esperanto was published.
+ In 1908, he became the director of the Grammar Section of the Esperanto Academy.
+ The books and poems that he changed into Esperanto from other languages helped to make Esperanto more well-known and used.
+ After World War I there was new hope for Esperanto because of the desire of people to live in peace.
+ They also teach the language in elementary schools and do some other cultural and educational events using the Esperanto language together with the PolandPolish twin town Góra.
+ It is thought that no more than one or two thousand people speak Esperanto as their first language.
+ They like the Esperanto community and culture.
+ In this magazine, Esperanto speakers could vote about the changes.
+ He was member of the Academy of Esperanto and honorary member of the Universal Association of Esperanto.
+ The rules in Esperanto never change and can always be applied in the same way.
+ So, in 1888, Grabowski started to rewrite books into Esperanto from other languages.
+ This is an important difference with the other Romance languages and also with made-up languages like Esperanto and Ido.
+ Native Esperanto speakers can use this language completely and more fluently than non-native Esperanto speakers.
+ They also criticize the fact that most of the words in Esperanto come from Indo-European languages, which makes the language less neutral.
+ The International Youth Congress of Esperanto met there in 1980 and made a big statement.
+ Many Esperanto speakers died in concentration camps.
+ Every year they organize big Esperanto meetings such as the World Congress of Esperanto, International Youth Congress of Esperanto and SAT-Congress.
+ Therefore, Esperanto is the most-used constructed language in the world.
+ The main internet Esperanto songbook KantarViki has got 3,000 songs in May 2013, both original and translated.
+ Children who learned Esperanto as one of their first languages speak with grammar like the other languages they learned.
+ People who have goals for Esperanto that are more similar to Zamenhof’s are sometimes called ‘, an Esperanto phrase which means “final victory”.
+ Baldur Ragnarsson was an Icelandic poet and author of Esperanto works.
+ Many people use Esperanto to communicate by mail, email, blogs or chat rooms with Esperantists in other countries.
+ However this proposal is not widely accepted by Esperanto speakers.
+ Because Esperanto uses letters with diacritics, there was the need to write text in Esperanto even if the special letters are not available.
+ The Esperanto alphabet is based on the Roman alphabet.
+ Among active Esperanto musicians is for example SwedenSwedish socio-critical music group "La Perdita Generacio", Occitan singer "JoMo", the Finnish group "Dolchamar", Polish singer-songwriter Georgo Handzlik.
+ Criticism of some parts of Esperanto motivated the creation of various new constructed languages like Ido, Novial, Interlingua and Lojban.