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  1. Proto-Esperanto ( Esperanto: Pra-Esperanto) is the modern term for any of the stages in the evolution of L. L. Zamenhof 's language project, prior to the publication of Unua Libro in 1887. The Neo-Jewish language of ca. 1879.

  2. ʃ. t. u. u̯. v. z. There is a nearly one-to-one correspondence of letter to sound. For those who consider /d͜z/ to be a phoneme, Esperanto contains one consonantal digraph, dz . [3] Beside the dual use of j , allophony is found in place assimilation of /m/ and /n/, the latter of which for example is frequently pronounced [ ŋ] before g and k .

  3. Esperanto etymology - Wikipedia. Contents. hide. (Top) Source languages. Romance and Germanic. Latin and Greek. Slavic and Lithuanian. Other languages. Obscure roots. Inflections. Technical vocabulary. Competing root forms. Traces of Proto-Esperanto. Notes. Bibliography. External links. Esperanto etymology. Part of a series on. Esperanto. Language.

  4. 1999: The Esperanto poet William Auld is nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature. 2001: The Vikipedio project (Esperanto Wikipedia) is launched, resulting in the first general encyclopedia written in a constructed language. It is now one of the most popular websites in Esperanto.

  5. Wikimedia. v. t. e. The original word base of Esperanto contained around 900 root words and was defined in Unua Libro ("First Book"), published by L. L. Zamenhof in 1887. In 1894, Zamenhof published the first Esperanto dictionary, Universala vortaro ("International Dictionary"), which was written in five languages and supplied a larger set of ...

  6. Protoesperanto (o Praesperanto en Esperanto) es el término actual para definir cualquiera de las anteriores etapas de desarrollo del idioma construido por Zamenhof previas a la publicación del Unua Libro en 1887. Siendo niño, Zamenhof tuvo la idea de crear un idioma auxiliar para la comunicación internacional.

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