| Adjuvilo | |
|---|---|
| Created by | Claudius Colas |
| Date | 1910 |
| Setting and usage | International auxiliary language |
| Purpose | |
| Sources | a posteriori language |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-2 | art |
| ISO 639-3 | – |
Adjuvilo is a language created in 1910 by Claudius Colas under the pseudonym of "Profesoro V. Esperema". Although it was a full language, it may not have been created to be spoken. Many believe that as an Esperantist, Colas created Adjuvilo to help create dissent in the then-growing Ido movement. Colas himself called his language simplified Ido and proposed several reforms to Ido.
Colas created a nearly complete grammar, but did not create a new vocabulary. Adjuvilo uses mainly the vocabulary of Ido with modifications according to the grammatical changes of Ido. Colas in some cases reestablishes the Esperanto forms of words and even constructed some new words like sulo for "sun" (Ido//Esperanto: suno) and dago for "day" (Ido: dio, Esperanto: tago).
|
Contents
|
Adjuvilo uses the same phonology and orthography as Ido. The only modification is that always the stress is always on the penultimate syllable like in Esperanto, whereas in Ido in the infinitive of the verbs the last syllable is stressed.
All in all the changes to Ido were so great that Adjuvilo in fact is a new constructed language.
A sample of Adjuvilo, the often-translated Pater Noster:
Patro nosa, qua estan en cielos, santa esten tua nomo, advenen tua regno, esten tua volo, quale en cielos, tale anke sur la tero; nosa panon omnadaga donen a nos hodie; nosas ofendos pardonen a nos, quale nos pardonan a nosas ofendantos e ne lasen nos fali en tento, ma liberifen nos de malbono.
|
|||||||||||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)