Monday, 26 December 2011

A key to the International Language, Esperanto.






Je la nomo de Allah, la donema, la pardonema.



My Photo 

Centra Oficejo:
Pakistana Esperanto-Asocio (PakEsA) 
Esperanto Markaz, Chowk Shahidan, 
Multan, Pakistano.
pakesa@hotmail.com







INTRODUCTION

The 3000 languages in the world today were originated by our ancient ancestors and morphed over several millennia. These languages are full of inconsistencies and irregularities. It is a tribute to the capacity of the human mind that it can handle such difficult material. In 1887, a new language, free from irregularities, was introduced. By speaking this relatively easy-to-learn bridge language, people from all backgrounds are able to overcome the language barrier. Today, Esperanto is the only planned human language in widespread use. Use an Esperanto-English dictionary and refer to this "key" while reading texts in Esperanto to help you unlock the meaning of Esperanto according to the grammatical rules.


ALPHABET


A  B  C  Ĉ  D  E  F  G  Ĝ  H  Ĥ  I  J  Ĵ  
 a  b  c   ĉ   d   e   f  g  ĝ  h  ĥ  i  j  ĵ   


K  L  M  N  O  P  R  S  Ŝ  T  U  Ŭ  V  Z  
k  l  m  n  o  p  r  s  ŝ  t  u  ŭ  v  z  


Every Esperanto word is pronounced as it is spelt, without exception. The five vowels are a as in father, e as in set, i as in machine, o as in bone,u as in tune. (These guides are for U.S. English speakers.)

The six letters unique to Esperanto, ĉĝĥĵŝ and ŭ, were introduced so that every sound could be represented by just one letter (unlike combinations such as "ch" in "church" or "sh" as in "shoe"). In Esperanto, q, w, x and y are absent, but appear in foreign names, and are treated like ç, ñ, ð, ø, ß etc.
The consonants are pronounced pretty much the same as in English, but those that differ from English are as follows: 

c
ts as in dance
ĉ
ch as in chop
g
'hard' g as in go
ĝ
'soft' g as in age
ĥ
'hard' like j in Andalusean Spanish jota
or ch in Scottish loch
j
y as in year
ĵ
is like s in pleasure
s
always like s in sip
ŝ
sh as in shoe
ŭ
w as in west

All of the other consonants are like in English, except note that r is slightly trilled, like in Spanish. The dot over the j is lost in ĵ.
Combinations involving vowels:

aj
like y in sky
ej
like ay in day
oj
like oy in boy
uj
like ouy in bouy, but as one syllable
like ow in cow
say eh+w as one syllable

The stress in Esperanto always falls on the second-to-last vowel. Be careful with words like radio and familio, in which the last i is stressed. Also, be aware that there are no "silent" letters in Esperanto. So in words with combinations such as kn or sc at the beginning, both consonants must be sounded out. The sc combination may be tricky, but in reality it is common in English, in words such as chests. This combination appears on the beginning of some common Esperanto words.


STRUCTURE (NOUNS, ADJECTIVES & VERBS)


Esperanto words consist of an assembly of parts put together in a logical fashion. Their function in a sentence is signaled by their grammatical endings. The ability to make words by combination greatly reduces the need for memorization. This principle is found in nature, where, from approximately 110 elements, millions of substances can be created by various combinations.

Root words, or base words, give the general idea, but they lack a definite meaning until they receive a grammatical ending. Take the root akv-, for example, which means “water.” Adding -o makes the singular noun akvo, a thing, “water." Adding -j makes it plural, so that akvoj means “waters.” Alternatively, adding -a to akv- makes akva, an adjective, “watery.”

The Guinness Book of World Records lists Esperanto as the only language in which there are no irregular verbs to learn. By comparison, French has 2238, and Spanish and German have about 700 apiece. There is only one pattern in Esperanto, which consists of just 6 endings for verbs. The present, past and future are shown by the endings -as-is and -os, respectively. The infinitive is shown by -i, the imperative by -u, and the conditional by -us. So, from the root for “speak,” parol-, and mi (meaning "I") we make:

mi parolas
I speak, I am speaking
mi parolis
I spoke, I was speaking
mi parolos
I will speak
paroli
to speak
parolu!
speak!
mi parolu
I should speak
mi parolus
I would speak
To ask a yes/no question in Esperanto, the word ĉu is used. Any sentence that begins with ĉu is saying, “Is it true that…?” Ĉu li parolis?Means “Did you speak?” In non-interrogatory, contexts, ĉu means “whether.”


PRONOUNS

mi
I, me
ni
we, us
vi
you (whether one or many)
li ŝi ĝi
he, him
she, her
it
ili
they, them

si
reflexive pronoun for when the actor
of a verb is also the recipient of the action.
oni
one/they
Example: Oni diras ke... They say that...

Adding -a to a pronoun makes it possessive. mia = my. These possessive pronouns behave in the same manner as adjectives, in that they can go before or after the noun, and they will be in the plural (and accusative, see below) if the noun is also. “My house” could be mia domo or domo mia.


AFFIXES

Affixes are the elements which are most often used to modify the meanings of root words, although they can stand as root words if logic permits. Those affixes which come at the beginnings of words are called prefixes, those found at the ends of roots are called suffixes. The very last part of a complete Esperanto word is the grammatical ending, for example, one of the endings used above to create verbs.

Prefixes

bo-
in-law
filo
son
bofilo
son-in-law
dis-
separation
doni
to give
disdoni
to distribute
eks-
former
edzo
husband
eksedzo
ex-husband
ek-
start
vidi
to see
ekvidi
to catch a glimpse of
fi-
immoral
libro
book
filibro
dirty book
ge-
both sexes
patro
father/parent
gepatroj
parents
mal-
opposite (note: not "bad")
varma
warm
malvarma
cold
pra-
long ago
historio
history
prahistorio
prehistory
re-
again
legi
to read
relegi
to read again


Suffixes

-aĉ
filthy
vetero
weather
veteraĉo
foul weather
-ad
continuation
studi
to study
studado
act of studying
-aĵ
thing
manĝi
to eat
manĝaĵo
food
-an
member
klubo
club
klubano
club member
-ar
collection
arbo
tree
arbaro
forest
-ebl
possible
vidi
to see
videbla
visible
-ec
quality
libera
free
libereco
freedom
-eg
increases
domo
house
domego
mansion
-ej
place
kuiri
to cook
kuirejo
kitchen
-em
tendency
paroli
speak
parolema
talkative
-er
piece of
polvo
dust
polvero
dust mote
-estr
boss
lernejo
school
lernejestro
principal
-et
reduces
domo
house
dometo
cottage
-id
offspring
kato
cat
katido
kitten
-iĝ
become
naski verda
to bear
green
naskiĝi verdiĝi
to be born
to become green
-ig
causation
dormi
to sleep
dormigi
to put to sleep
-il
tool
tranĉi
to cut
tranĉilo
knife
-ind
worthy
laŭdi
to praise
laŭdinda
praiseworthy
-ing
socket
kandelo
candle
kandelingo
candlestick
-ĉj
male diminutive
patro
father
paĉjo
papa
-in
female
avo leono
grandfather
lion
avino leonino
grandmother
leonino
-ism
ideology
Markso
Marx (Karl)
marksismo
Marxism
-ist
professional
baki
to bake
bakisto
baker
-nj
female diminutive
patrino
mother
panjo
mama
-op
group
tri
3
triopo
threesome
-uj
container
cigaro
cigar
cigarujo
cigar box
-ul
guy
nova
new
novulo
newbie/novice

-um
(wild card)

um is an affix with no definite meaning that you can use when no others are appropriate.

folio
leaf
foliumi
to leaf through (a book, for example)
cerbo
brain
cerbumi
to brainstorm

Whole words can be built from the affixes. ilo tool, ilaro a set of tools, ilarujo a toolbox. See how creative you can be!


ADVERBS

Adverbs are words that modify a verb, adjective or another adverb and describe how some action is done. They are formed by adding -e to the root. So Li rapide kuras means "he quickly runs." -e can be attached to almost any root, so a sentence such as Kata kato kate katasmeaning "a catlike cat cattishly behaves as a cat," is entirely possible. Note there is no Esperanto word for "a or an." There is only one word, la, for "the."

There is a separate class of adverbs, marked by -aŭ. When a word has this ending, it is incorporated into the root. For example, "soon" isbaldaŭ, but there is no root bald-. You can, however, add affixes and grammatical endings to make words such as baldaŭa, which would mean "forthcoming."


NUMBERS

The numerals are completely regular, and are built with a small number of elements.

0
nul
1
unu
2
du
3
tri
4
kvar
5
kvin
6
ses
7
sep
8
ok
9
naŭ
10
dek
100
cent
1000
mil

From these thirteen root words, you can make any number under a million.

11
dek unu
12
dek du
13
dek tri
20
dudek
21
dudek unu
39
tridek naŭ
140
cent kvardek
1999
mil naŭcent naŭdek naŭ
2000
du mil

The numbers listed above are called cardinal numbers. Ordinal numbers, which are used to put things in their order, (such as "first," "second," "third", etc.), are formed by putting -a at the end. So, "the 7th father" is la sepa patro. But "7 fathers" would be sep patroj.


CORRELATIVES

The idea behind correlative words is that certain words like where, there, nowhere, everywhere and somewhere are related, as are whose, that person's, no one's, everyone's and someone’s.

Each correlative word consists of three parts, with i being in the middle of every word (it is also the accented syllable in every correlative word).
The last part of each word shows the topic. Here are the nine in alphabetical order:

a
kind
al
motive or reason
am
time
e
place
el
manner
es
possession
o
object
om
amount
u
individuality

At the beginning comes the five ways to think about the topics. These parts are:

k
question
t
definite answer
(blank)
indefinite
nen
negation
ĉ
universality

After assembling the nine endings and five beginnings, we can logically create 45 words, although some meanings would have to be stretched in precise English translation.

kia
what kind of?
tia
that kind of
ia
some kind of
nenia
no kind of
ĉia
every kind of

kial
for what reason? why?
tial
for that reason, therefore
ial
for some reason
nenial
for no reason
ĉial
for every reason

kiam
at what time? when?
tiam
at that time, then
iam
at some time, sometime
neniam
at no time, never
ĉiam
at every time, always

kie
at what place? where?
tie
at that place, there
ie
at some place, somewhere
nenie
at no place, nowhere
ĉie
at every place, everywhere

kiel
in what manner? how?
tiel
in that manner, thus
iel
in some manner
neniel
in no manner
ĉiel
in every manner

kies
belonging to whom? whose?
ties
that one's
ies
someone's
nenies
nobody's
ĉies
everybody's

kio
what thing? what?
tio
that thing
io
something
nenio
nothing
ĉio
everything

kiom
what quantity? how much/many?
tiom
that much/many
iom
some of
neniom
none of
ĉiom
all of

kiu
who/which person?
tiu
that person
iu
someone
neniu
no one
ĉiu
each person

The table in a more concise format looks like:

-i- in the middle
k- question
t- definite answer
(blank) indefinite
nen- negation
ĉ- universality
-a kind
kia what kind?
tia kind
ia some kind of
nenia no kind of
ĉia every kind of
-al motive, reason
kial why? for what reason?
tial 
for that reason
ial 
for some reason
nenial 
for no reason
ĉial 
for every reason
-am time
kiam when? at what time?
tiam then at that time
iam sometime at some time
neniam never 
at no time
ĉiam always at every time
-e place
kie where? at what place?
tie there at that place
ie somewhere at some place
nenie nowhere at no place
ĉie everywhere at that place
-el manner
kiel how? in what way?
tiel thus in that way
tiel 
in some way
neniel 
in no way
ĉiel 
in every way
-es possession
kies whose? belonging to whom?
ties 
that person's
ies 
somebody's
nenies 
nobody's
ĉies 
everybody's
-o object
kio what thing?
tio that thing
io something
nenio nothing
ĉio everything
-om quantity
kiom how much?
tiom that much
iom some amount
neniom no amount
ĉiom all of
-u individuality
kiu who? which person
tiu 
that person
iu 
somebody
neniu 
nobody
ĉiu 
each person

The correlatives ending with -u can be pluralized into kiujtiujiujneniuj and ĉiuj, which mean which people?, those people, some people, (neniuj is possible, but not logical), and everyone.

kiu fenestro
which window?
tiu fenestro
that window
iu fenestro
some window
neniu fenestro
no window
ĉiu fenestro
every window

Correlatives can serve as root words and be built upon. Esperantists ask Kioma estas la horo? meaning "What time is it," or more precisely, “how many is the hour?" Another example is the word kialo which means "a reason."

Notice how the correlatives save time by reducing the amount of memorization. From 14 parts (9 + 5), you get 45 words (9 × 5).

Adding one more word, ajn, to the ki- words and the i- words, you give it uncertainty. kie means where, so kie ajn means wherever and iemeans somewhere, and ie ajn means anywhere. This pattern applies to all of the correlatives that start with ki- and i-.

Also, the particle ĉi added to the t- correlatives indicates nearness. ĉi tie means "here," and ĉi tiam means "at this time." It can come before or after the correlative.


PARTICIPLES

Participles are usually based on verbs. If we say, "he is dividing the cake, now the cake is divided," we use one active participle (dividing) and one passive participle (divided).

Esperanto participles are very precise. They not only indicate whether a participle is active or passive, they also tell whether they are taking place in the past, present or future, using ia, or o, matching the letters for the simple tenses.

falonta botelo is a bottle which will fall. A falanta botelo is one that is falling through the air. After it hits the floor, it is a falinta botelo. This illustrates the active participle's three forms.

The passive participle is analogous. A cake that is going to be divided is a dividota kuko. When it is in the process of being divided, it is adividata kuko. Having been cut, it is now a dividita kuko.

These participles can be combined with the three tenses of esti ("to be") to form 9 compound tenses with the active participle and 9 with the passive. This requires some memorization and should be avoided in original expression. They may, however, become necessary for rigorous translation from English. As an example, we can say that in the future, the bottle will have fallen by saying La botelo estos falinta.

If the noun ending o is used instead of the adjectival a, the participle becomes a person. A vidanto is a person who sees. A person who did see is a vidinto. A person who will see is called a vidonto. In the passive, a vidato is a person who is being seen right now, a vidito is one who has been seen and a vidoto is one who will be seen in the future.

All these facts apply to every single verb in the language, without exception.


ACCUSATIVE

Esperanto words contain more information than do English words. Esperanto words clearly show what function they fulfill in a sentence, while English words require placement within a sentence in order to determine what function it fulfills. This structure requires a bit more precision on the part of the Esperanto speaker, but the payoff is that the listener can understand the ideas more clearly, and the speaker can take great liberty with the order in which he speaks his words.

The letter n marks nouns and their adjectives which receive the direct action of the verb. In order to say the dog saw the big cat, you would say,la hundo vidis la grandan katon. English requires rigid word order, so that "man bites dog" and "dog bites man" mean two completely different things, even though the only difference is the order in which the words are written. But la grandan katon vidis la hundo has will have the same meaning, regardless of word order.

Notice that the adjective grandan takes the accusative because it agrees with the noun katon. This is true of the plural as well. Esperanto speakers say grandaj katoj if there are more than one. The plural is used together with the accusative. "The dog saw the big cats" would be la hundo vidis la grandajn katojn.
The use of the accusative is extended to motion toward. For instance, la kato kuras sub la tablo means that the cat is under the table, running around. La kato kuras sub la tablon, however, means that the cat ran from somewhere else to underneath the table.

Expressions of time take the accusative ending as well. Instead of saying "I will come on Sunday," Esperantists say Mi venos dimanĉon. Notice that there is no equivalent to "on" in the Esperanto expression of time.

The accusative is used to show measurement, too. In English, we say "I weigh 100 kilograms." In Esperanto, one would say Mi pezas cent kilogramojn, which literally means "I am heavy 100 kilograms." (Note that in international speech, relatively few will know how much a pound weighs). The accusative will be applied to the unit of measurement for cost, periods of time, length, width, height, distance, temperature, mass, weight, volume, density, speed etc.

Pronouns (miviili...) and correlatives ending in vowels do take the accusative when necessary. Ordinal numbers (first, second, third… ending in Esperanto in -a) take the accusative, but cardinal numbers (one, two, three…) never do.


PREPOSTITIONS

Prepositions are particles placed before a noun or adjective/noun to form a clause. In English, an example would be "at the beach." In that prepositional phrase, the preposition is "at." Esperanto forms these type of phrases similarly, so "at the beach" would be ĉe la plaĝo. In that sentence, ĉe is the preposition. Some Esperanto prepositions are more concise than English prepositions, for example, "according to me" would be laŭ mi, since laŭ means "according to." Prepositions are often used as affixes, like ĉe-esti means “to attend,” or “to be at.” Where logic permits, most can also stand as root words that can be built upon, such as ekstera, which means “external.”

al
to
anstataŭ
instead of
antaŭ
before, in front of
apud
near
ĉe
at
ĉirkaŭ
around
de
of, from, by
dum
during
ekster
outside
el
out from
en
in
ĝis
until
inter
among
kontraŭ
against
krom
besides
kun
with
kvazaŭ
as if
laŭ
according to, along
malantaŭ
after, behind  (mal+antaŭ to make
the opposite of ‘before/in front of’) 
malgraŭ
in spite of
ol
than (in comparison)
per
by means of
po
at a rate of, @
por
in order to
post
after
preter
beyond
pri
about, concerning
pro
on account of
sen
without
sub
under
super
above
sur
on
tra
through
trans
across

Like the -um suffix, there is a similar "wild card" preposition: je. It is useful in certain phrases such as "I bet money on the horse." The prepositionsur ("on top of") does not accurately capture the meaning, so to mean “on” you can use the preposition je, which has no definite meaning. This is commonly used with expressions of time. “At 3 o’clock” is not a place, so ĉe to mean “at” does not work. For that purpose, je is used.  









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