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Does international language work?

 Language Learning Forum : General discussion Post Reply
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Cainntear
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 Message 33 of 91
21 January 2010 at 1:08am | IP Logged 
zooplah wrote:
John Smith wrote:
I doubt a Japanese or a Chinese person would find Esperanto as being more neutral than say French.

Of course they do. There was a report on CRI (Ĉina Radio Internacia) about Chinese children quickly picking up Esperanto. There have been similar anecdotes by adults who learned it quickly where they failed in learning Indo-European languages. Really, you're parroting refuted nonsense and I'm parroting the refutations. The late Claude Piron had a couple articles about ways in which Esperanto was structurally more similar to Chinese than to English and French.

But does it generally take Chinese people longer to learn Esperanto than (for example) Germans and Poles? That's part of neutrality, surely....
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davidwelsh
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 Message 34 of 91
22 January 2010 at 9:31am | IP Logged 
Cainntear wrote:
But does it generally take Chinese people longer to learn Esperanto than (for example) Germans and Poles? That's part of neutrality, surely....


There is a difference, but it's minimal compared to the difference between Chinese and Germans and Poles learning Esperanto on the one hand and their learning English on the other.

It's true that speakers of European languages have an advantage in learning Esperanto in that they will recognise a lot of the vocabulary and so will have less memorising to do. This advantage though is marginal compared to the huge advantages all learners have by virtue of the affix system, regular grammar and the isolating nature of the language.

Esperanto was never intended to be equally easy to learn for everyone. The only way you could make Esperanto equally easy for all would be to make it harder for everyone, by creating the vocabulary from scratch or mangling loan words beyond easy recognition. (The latter was Volapük's approach.)

Zamenhof drew on European languages because they were - and still are - by far the most widely spoken around the world. It's not just Europeans who speak European languages. North and South Americans overwhelmingly speak a European language natively, and a great many people in Africa and Asia speak one as a foreign or second language. By using European languages as the basis for the lexis Zamenhof wanted to ensure that the maximum number of people would have a significant lexical discount.

The point about Esperanto being neutral is that it doesn't belong to anyone. There is no native speaker norm to which you have to conform. Esperanto spoken by a Chinese is just as valid and correct as Esperanto spoken by a European. That's essentially where the claim of neutrality comes from.

Edited by davidwelsh on 22 January 2010 at 9:58am

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davidwelsh
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Speaks: Lowland Scots, English*, Norwegian, Esperanto, Swedish, Danish, French
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 Message 35 of 91
22 January 2010 at 10:56am | IP Logged 
wildweathel wrote:
Esperanto has succeeded beyond other IAL's not because it's the easiest or most neutral or because of its creator's linguistic expertise, but because it was in the right place at the right time.


I don't think this is quite true. Certainly the late 19th century was a good time to be promoting an International Auxiliary Language, but IALs were ten a penny in Zamenhof's day, it wasn't just Volapük. According to Arika Okrent's list there were 35 IALs published in the 1880s alone. In 1887, Esperanto was one of 8 IALs to be published. It was Esperanto that emerged from this seething market of ideas, not by luck but by popular acclaim. It was the one most people chose, because they judged it to be best suited to the purposes of an IAL. It was Esperanto's emergence that killed Volapük, simply because most Volapük speakers decided Esperanto was better, and switched.

Edited by davidwelsh on 30 January 2010 at 2:22pm

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Gusutafu
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 Message 36 of 91
22 January 2010 at 1:15pm | IP Logged 
davidwelsh wrote:

In 1887, Esperanto was one of 8 IALs to be published. It was Esperanto that emerged from this seething market of ideas, not by luck but by popular acclaim. It was the one most people chose, because they judged it to be best suited to the purposes of an IAL. It was Esperanto's emergence that killed Volapük, simply because most Volapük speakers decided Esperanto was better, and switched.


Something like the way people chose Microsoft over Apple, Linux, Unix, Commodore etc because Windows is the superior OS? Or the triumph of VHS over Betamax? Really, it is seldom "the best" solution that emerges victorious, it is more about luck, pricing and marketing. In any case, Esperanto didn't "emerge" very far, after more than a century of, it is still smaller than Norwegian! Volapuk is a joke in Swedish, it means "rigomarole", so beating Volapuk is not much of an achievement.
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Cainntear
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 Message 37 of 91
22 January 2010 at 2:28pm | IP Logged 
One of the most appealing features of Esperanto is that the author said people were free to change it. However, if you think about it, it's a fairly superficial claim, as the official grammar books exist and if anyone attempts to learn a "different" Esperanto, they'll not be understood!

There's an illusion, therefore, of being able to "fix" what you think is wrong, which Volapük et al didn't offer.
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Gusutafu
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 Message 38 of 91
22 January 2010 at 6:53pm | IP Logged 
Cainntear wrote:
One of the most appealing features of Esperanto is that the author said people were free to change it. However, if you think about it, it's a fairly superficial claim, as the official grammar books exist and if anyone attempts to learn a "different" Esperanto, they'll not be understood!

There's an illusion, therefore, of being able to "fix" what you think is wrong, which Volapük et al didn't offer.


In reality, Esperanto must be much less flexible than natural languages. If enough people say something in a new way in English, that is the new norm. Not so with Esperanto, at least if they take the official grammar seriously.
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davidwelsh
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Speaks: Lowland Scots, English*, Norwegian, Esperanto, Swedish, Danish, French
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 Message 40 of 91
23 January 2010 at 12:32am | IP Logged 
Gusutafu wrote:
In reality, Esperanto must be much less flexible than natural languages. If enough people say something in a new way in English, that is the new norm. Not so with Esperanto, at least if they take the official grammar seriously.


Nope, that's exactly how it works in Esperanto too.


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