fbpx
Wikipedia

Esperanto etymology

Esperanto vocabulary and grammatical forms derive primarily from the Romance languages, with substantial contributions from Germanic languages. The language occupies a middle ground between "naturalistic" constructed languages such as Interlingua, which borrow words en masse from their source languages with little internal derivation, and a priori conlangs such as Solresol, in which the words have no historical connection to other languages. In Esperanto, root words are borrowed and retain much of the form of their source language, whether the phonetic form (eks- from international ex-, ŝvebi from German schweben, vualo from French voile) or orthographic form (teamo and boato from English team and boat, soifo from French soif). However, each root can then form dozens of derivations which may bear little resemblance to equivalent words in the source languages, such as registaro (government), which is derived from the Latinate root reg (to rule) but has a morphology closer to German or Russian.

Source languages edit

Zamenhof took most of his Esperanto root words from languages of the Italic and Germanic families, principally Italian, French, German, Yiddish, and English. A large number are what might be called common European international vocabulary, or generic Romance: Roots common to several languages, such as vir- "man", found in English words such as virile, and okul- "eye", found in oculist. Some appear to be compromises between the primary languages, such as tondri (to thunder), per French tonner, Italian tuonare, German donnern and English thunder.

Romance and Germanic edit

The main languages contributing to Zamenhof's original vocabulary were French, English, and German/Yiddish, the modern languages most widely learned in schools around the world at the time Esperanto was devised. The result was that about two-thirds of this original vocabulary is Romance, and about one-third Germanic, including a pair of roots from Swedish:

Comparative the ju ... des ... (as in "the more the merrier"), from Swedish ju ... desto .... (Cf. German je ... desto ....)

A couple of words, strato (street) and gisto (yeast), are closer to Dutch (straat, gist) than German (Straße [ʃtrasə], Gest), but this may be a compromise between German and English the way ŝtono (stone) is a compromise between German Stein [ʃtajn] and English stone. (There's also ronki (to snore), Dutch ronken.) Fajro (fire) matches the pronunciation of English fire, but is also spelled and pronounced as Yiddish פֿײַר fajr. Indeed, much of the supposedly German vocabulary actually appears to be Yiddish, specifically Zamenhof's native Bialystok (Northeastern) dialect, which had formed the basis of his abortive attempt to standardize that language. Words with the digraph ei in German may in Esperanto have either ej (seemingly corresponding to the spelling) or aj (seemingly corresponding to the pronunciation). This pattern is not random, but reflects ei and ī in Old High German, a distinction preserved in Yiddish: hejmo (home: German Heim [hajm] but Yiddish הײם hejm), fajfi (whistle: both German pfeifen [p͜fajfən] and Yiddish פֿײַפֿן fajfn).[1] Zamenhof never admitted to a Yiddish influence in Esperanto, presumably to avoid arousing antisemitic prejudice.

Many of the Latinate roots were given an Italianesque appearance, corresponding to the use of Italian as a model for Esperanto pronunciation, but in form are closer to French, such as ĉemizo (shirt: French chemise [ʃəmiz], Italian camicia [kamit͡ʃa]) and ĉevalo (horse: French cheval [ʃəval], Italian cavallo [kavallo]). Since Zamenhof's day, a large amount of Latinate vocabulary has been added to the language. In 1987, Mattos calculated that 84% of basic vocabulary was Latinate, 14% Germanic, and 2% Slavic or Greek.[2]

Latin and Greek edit

Only a few roots were taken directly from the classical languages:

Latin: sed (but), tamen (however), post (after), kvankam (although), kvazaŭ (as though), dum (during), nek (nor), (or), hodiaŭ (today), abio (fir), ardeo (heron), iri (to go—though this form survives in the future tense in French ira), prujno (frost), the adverbial suffix -e, and perhaps the inherent vowels of the past and present tenses, -i- and -a-. Many lexical affixes are common to several languages and thus may not have a clear source, but some such as -inda (worthy of), -ulo (a person), -um- (undefined), and -op- (a number together) may be Latin (e.g. the Latin gerundive -end-, the neuter inflection -um).
Classical Greek: kaj (and, from καί kai), pri (about, from περί perí), the plural suffix -j, the accusative case suffix -n, the inceptive prefix ek- (from ἐκ ek), and perhaps the jussive mood suffix -u (if that is not Hebrew).
Latin and Greek: the suffix -ido (offspring; from Latin -idēs and Greek -ίδης -ídēs).

As in the examples of ardeo 'heron' and abio 'fir' above, the names of most plants and animals are based on their binomial nomenclature, and so many are Latin or Greek as well.

Slavic and Lithuanian edit

Surprisingly few roots appear to have come from other modern European languages, even those Zamenhof was most familiar with. What follows is a fairly comprehensive list of such roots that do not also occur in principal languages:

Russian: barakti (to flounder, from барахтаться barahtatʹsja), gladi (to iron, from гладить gladitʹ), kartavi (to pronounce a guttural R, from кapтaвить kartavitʹ), deĵori (to be on duty, from дежурить dezhyritʹ), kolbaso (a sausage, from колбаса kolbasa), krom (except, from кроме krome), kruta (steep, from крутой krutoj), nepre (without fail, from непременно nepremenno), vosto (a tail, from хвост hvost), the pet-name suffixes -ĉjo and -njo (from -чка -čka and -нька -nʹka), the augmentative suffix -eg- (from -яга -jaga), and perhaps the collective suffix -aro, if this is not from Latin.
Polish: barĉo (borscht, from barszcz), ĉu (whether, from czy, perhaps also Yiddish tsu), (even, from jeszcze), krado (a grating, from krata), luti (to solder, from lutować), [via] moŝto ([your] highness, from mość), ol (than, possibly from od by analogy with al), pilko (a ball, from piłka), ŝelko (suspenders, from szelki).
Russian or Polish: bulko (a bread roll, from bułka / булка bulka), celo (an aim, goal, from cel / цѣль tselʹ, cognates of German Ziel), kaĉo (porridge, from kasza / каша kaša), klopodi (to undertake, from kłopot / хлопотать khlopotatʹ), po (per, from po / по po), pra- (proto-, from pra- / пра- pra-), prava (right [in opinion], from prawy / правый pravyj), svati (to matchmake, from swat / сват svat).
Lithuanian: tuj (immediately, from tuoj); possibly also du (two, from , if not from Latin duo), the suffix -ope (a number together, cf. dvejopas), and ĝi (it, from ji, jis).

However, although few roots come directly from these languages, Russian exerted a considerable substratum influence on the semantics of Esperanto. An oft-cited example is plena "full, complete", which is Latinate in form (French plein(e), Latin plen- "full"), but has the semantic range of Russian полный polnyi "full, complete", as can be seen in the phrase plena vortaro "a complete dictionary", a usage not possible with the French or Latin words.

Other languages edit

Other languages were only represented in the original vocabulary in so far as they were cognate with, or as their words had become widespread in, Esperanto's source languages. However, since that time many languages have contributed words for specialized or regional concepts, such as haŝioj (chopsticks) from Japanese and boaco (reindeer) from Saami.

Obscure roots edit

A few roots are obscure:

ĝi (it, s/he), -ujo (suffix for containers), edzo (husband)

Ĝi may possibly derive from the Lithuanian ji (she, it) and jis (he, it),[3] and -ujo from the French étui (case).[4]

Like another indirect German borrowing – fraŭlo (bachelor), which derives from fraŭlino (Miss, from German fräulein) less the feminine suffix -in- – the Esperanto word edzo (husband) appears to be a back-formation of edzino (wife). Zamenhof claimed the latter derives from kronprincedzino (crown princess), borrowed from the German Kronprinzessin, and then internally analyzed as kron- (crown) princ- (prince) edzino (wife).[5] However, Vilborg's Etimologia Vortaro argues that edzino is more likely to have come from Yiddish רביצין rebbetzin (rabbi's wife; Mrs.), reanalysed as rebb-etzin, and that Zamenhof made up the German etymology after the fact to avoid anti-Semitic prejudice against Esperanto. That would mean that edz- ultimately derives from the Slavic feminine suffix -its(a). Regardless, few words have histories this convoluted.

The correlatives, although clearly cognate with European languages (for example, kiel, tiel with French quel (which), tel (such); ĉiu with Italian ciascun (each), and -es with the German genitive -es, etc.), have been analogically leveled to the point that they are often given as examples of Esperanto innovations. This is especially true for the indefinite forms like io (something), which were devised by iconically removing the consonant of the ki- and ti- forms. Likewise, the restriction of the Italian and Greek masculine noun and adjective ending -o to nouns, and the feminine noun and adjective ending -a to adjectives and the article la, is an Esperanto innovation using existing forms.[6]

Some smaller words have been modified to the extent that they're difficult to recognize. For example, Italian a, ad (to) became al (to) under the influence of the Italian contraction al (to the), to better fit the phonotactics of Esperanto, and in a parallel change, Latin ex (out of) and Slavic od (by, than) may have become el (out of) and ol (than), though the latter also has the German parallel als.

Inflections edit

The Greek origin of the nominal inflections can be seen in the Greek a-declension nouns such as the word for "muse": musa, plural musai, accusative musan, which in Esperanto is muzo, muzoj, muzon. Greek o-declension words such as logos, logoi, logon (word) are similar, as are adjectival declensions such as aksia, aksiai, aksian (worthy). Greek was perhaps also the model of stressed i in Esperanto words like familío (family), which follows the common Greek pattern of aksía (worthy) and oikíai (houses).

Esperanto has a/i/o ablaut for present/past/future tense, which has partial parallels in Latin present amat, perfect amavit, and the corresponding infinitives amare, amavisse. Otto Jespersen said of the ablaut,

This play of vowels is not an original idea of Zamenhof's: -as, -is, -os are found for the three tenses of the infinitive in Faiguet's system of 1765; -a, -i, -o without a consonant are used like Z's -as, -is, -os by Rudelle (1858); Courtonne in 1885 [sic] had -am, -im, -om in the same values, and the similarity with Esperanto is here even more perfect than in the other projects, as -um corresponds to Z's -us. —An International Language (1928)

There may have been a Volapük influence as well, or the two languages may have shared a common influence from earlier languages. In Volapük, the vowels are present a-, future o-, past perfect i-, as well as imperfect ä- [ɛ]; Esperanto retained a distinction between preterite -is and imperfect -es until 1887, the year the modern form of the language was published.[7]

Jespersen didn't parse all of the morphology.[8] The ablaut for the five languages is as follows:

Faiguet
(1765)[2]
Rudelle
(1858)[3]
Volapük
(1880)
Courtonne
(1884)[4]
Esperanto
(1887)
present -a -a -a- [9] -a- -a-
future -y [10] -o o- -o- -o-
past/preterite -i -i i- (i)[11] -i-
imperfect -e -e ɛ- [12] -e- old -e-
conditional -ju [13] -u- -u-
subjunctive -u [14] -ə- -u

The infinitive suffix -i may derive from Latin deponent verbs, such as loqui (to speak). With elements like these that are only one or two letters long, it is difficult to know whether resemblances are due to the forms being related, or just coincidence. For example, it is speculated that the jussive -u is from the Hebrew imperative -û, but it could also be from the Greek [u] imperative of deponent verbs such as dekhou (receive!); or perhaps it was inspired by [u] being found in both Hebrew and Greek. Similarly, adverbial -e is found in Latin and Italian (bene) as well as in Russian (after a palatalized consonant); the participle bases -t- and -nt- are found in Latin, Italian, Greek, and German; and the pronominal base -i is found in Italian (-mi, -ti, -vi, -si, -gli for Esperanto mi, ci, vi, si, li) and English (me, we, he, she).

There are other parallels with prior constructed languages, such as ili 'they', the numerals un du tri and the feminine suffix -in, which are identical to Jean Pirro's Universalglot of 1868, but it's difficult to tell if there is a connection or if this is merely coincidence due to using similar source languages.

Technical vocabulary edit

Modern international vocabulary, much of it Latin or Greek in origin, is of course used as well, but frequently for a family of related words only the root will be borrowed directly, and the rest will be derived from it using Esperanto means of word formation. For example, the computer term 'bit' was borrowed directly as bito, but 'byte' was then derived by compounding bito with the numeral ok (eight), for the uniquely Esperanto word bitoko ('an octet of bits'). Although not a familiar form to speakers of European languages, the transparency of its formation is helpful to those who do not have this advantage. Moreover, even bito has the synonym duumo, based on du (two) and -um- (the affix with undefined meaning).

With the exception of perhaps a hundred common or generic plant and animal names, Esperanto adopts the international binomial nomenclature of living organisms, using suitable orthography, and changing the nominal and adjectival grammatical endings to -o and -a. For example, the binomial for the guineafowl is Numida meleagris. In Esperanto, therefore, a numido would be any bird of the genus Numida, and a meleagra numido the helmeted guineafowl specifically. Likewise, a numidedo is any bird in the guineafowl family Numididæ.

Competing root forms edit

There is some question over which inflection to use when assimilating Latin and Greek words. Zamenhof generally preferred the oblique stem over the nominative singular form, as in reĝo (king), which follows the Latin oblique forms with reg– (compare English regicide), or floro (flower) as in floral, rather than nominative singular rex and flos. However, European national standards differ in this regard, resulting in debate over the form of later "international" borrowings, such as whether the asteroid Pallas should be Palaso in Esperanto, parallel to French and English names Pallas, or Palado, as in Italian Pallade, Russian Паллада (Palláda), and the English adjective Palladian. In some cases there are three possibilities, as can be seen in the English noun helix (x = [ks]), its plural helices (c = [s]), and its adjective helical (c = [k]). Although the resulting potential for conflict is frequently criticized, it does present an opportunity to disambiguate what would otherwise be homonyms based on culturally specific and often fossilized metaphors. For example, Venuso (the planet Venus) may be distinguished from Venero (the goddess Venus), all three of the forms of Latin helix are found as Esperanto roots, one with the original meaning, and the other two representing old metaphors: helico (a spiral), heliko (a snail), helikso (the incurved rim of the ear).

Normally the Latin or Greek inflectional ending is replaced with the Esperanto inflectional ending −o. However, the original inflection will occasionally be retained, as if it were part of the root, in order to disambiguate from a more common word. For example, a virus (from Latin vir-us) is virus-o instead of the expected *vir-o in order to avoid confusion with vir-o (a man), and the Latin root corp-us is the source of both korp-o (a living body) and korpus-o (a military corps). Similarly, when the sound ĥ is replaced with k, as it commonly is (see Esperanto phonology), the word ĥoro (a chorus) is replaced with koruso to avoid creating a homonym with koro (a heart). The redundant inflection may have been inspired by Lithuanian, which otherwise contributed relatively little to Esperanto: compare fokuso (focus), kokoso (coconut), lotuso (lotus), patoso (pathos), radiuso (radius), sinuso (sine), and viruso (virus), with Lithuanian fokusas, kokosas, lotosas, patosas, radiusas, sinusas, and virusas (virus) vs. vyras (man).

Traces of Proto-Esperanto edit

Proto-Esperanto had voicing ablaut, traces of which remain in a few pairs of words such as pezi 'to weigh' (to have weight) and pesi 'to weigh' (to measure the weight). Because little of Proto-Esperanto has survived, it is not clear which other aspects of Esperanto etymology might date to this period.[15]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Christer Kiselman (2008). Andrzej Pelczar (ed.). "Esperanto: its origins and early history" (PDF). Prace Komisji Spraw Europejskich PAU. Krakow: Polska Akademia Umieje ̨tno ́sci. II: 39–56.
  2. ^ Mattos, Geraldo, "La deveno de Esperanto", Fonto 1987.
  3. ^ Vilborg
  4. ^ Floriano Pessoa, 2005, Etimologio: Skizo pri la deveno de la vortoj de Esperanto[1] 2017-02-24 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-02-12.
  6. ^ For speakers of Italian, Spanish or Portuguese, it may at first be jarring that Esperanto has the endings -o and -a of those languages, but assigns them to differentiate nouns from adjectives rather than masculine from feminine. However, there are parallels within Romance. In Provençal, for example, feminine nouns end in -o but take the article la: Provençal la fenestro (the window), Esperanto la fenestro; Provençal la vido (life), Esperanto la vivo; Provençal la roso [la rozo] (the rose), Esperanto la rozo; Provençal la voio [la vojo] (the road), Esperanto la vojo; etc. Even in Spanish and Italian, there are words with this pattern: la mano (the hand), la foto (the photo), la radio (the radio), la dinamo (the generator), etc., are common to Esperanto, Spanish, and Italian.
  7. ^ Christer Kiselman, 2010. 'Variantoj de esperanto iniciatitaj de Zamenhof'. In Esperanto: komenco, aktualo kaj estonteco 2016-03-05 at the Wayback Machine, UEA.
  8. ^ The infinitive -s in Faiguet drops in the indicative, leaving a simple vowel, and the -m in Courtonne is the first-person-singular suffix.
  9. ^ Appears in the passive inflections; there is no Volapük present-tense suffix in the active voice.
  10. ^ Spelled "u" but pronounced [y], as a French u. Faiguet used -o for the past perfect.
  11. ^ There is no simple past tense, but -i- is used for the past subjunctive
  12. ^ spelled "ä"
  13. ^ spelled "iy"; replacement for French "u"
  14. ^ spelled "y" (present subjunctive)
  15. ^ Kiselman (2010:64–65)

Bibliography edit

  • Vilborg, Ebbe, Etimologia Vortaro de Esperanto. Five volumes, Stokholmo, 1987–2001.
  • Cherpillod, André, Konciza Etimologia Vortaro. One volume, Roterdamo, 2003.

External links edit

  • Andras Rajki. . Archived from the original on 2007-10-12.
    Note: This dictionary should be used with caution. For example, amelo (starch) is given as a rare example of a Greek word that does not occur in Latin. However, it is not only a Latin derivation (from amyl-um), but more directly derives from German amel-.
  • Esperanto page[dead link] with a list of languages sorted by similarity of basic vocabulary. EVOLAEMP Project, University of Tübingen.

esperanto, etymology, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, decem. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Esperanto etymology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Esperanto vocabulary and grammatical forms derive primarily from the Romance languages with substantial contributions from Germanic languages The language occupies a middle ground between naturalistic constructed languages such as Interlingua which borrow words en masse from their source languages with little internal derivation and a priori conlangs such as Solresol in which the words have no historical connection to other languages In Esperanto root words are borrowed and retain much of the form of their source language whether the phonetic form eks from international ex ŝvebi from German schweben vualo from French voile or orthographic form teamo and boato from English team and boat soifo from French soif However each root can then form dozens of derivations which may bear little resemblance to equivalent words in the source languages such as registaro government which is derived from the Latinate root reg to rule but has a morphology closer to German or Russian Contents 1 Source languages 1 1 Romance and Germanic 1 2 Latin and Greek 1 3 Slavic and Lithuanian 1 4 Other languages 1 5 Obscure roots 2 Inflections 3 Technical vocabulary 4 Competing root forms 5 Traces of Proto Esperanto 6 Notes 7 Bibliography 8 External linksSource languages editZamenhof took most of his Esperanto root words from languages of the Italic and Germanic families principally Italian French German Yiddish and English A large number are what might be called common European international vocabulary or generic Romance Roots common to several languages such as vir man found in English words such as virile and okul eye found in oculist Some appear to be compromises between the primary languages such as tondri to thunder per French tonner Italian tuonare German donnern and English thunder Romance and Germanic edit The main languages contributing to Zamenhof s original vocabulary were French English and German Yiddish the modern languages most widely learned in schools around the world at the time Esperanto was devised The result was that about two thirds of this original vocabulary is Romance and about one third Germanic including a pair of roots from Swedish Comparative the ju des as in the more the merrier from Swedish ju desto Cf German je desto A couple of words strato street and gisto yeast are closer to Dutch straat gist than German Strasse ʃtrase Gest but this may be a compromise between German and English the way ŝtono stone is a compromise between German Stein ʃtajn and English stone There s also ronki to snore Dutch ronken Fajro fire matches the pronunciation of English fire but is also spelled and pronounced as Yiddish פ ײ ר fajr Indeed much of the supposedly German vocabulary actually appears to be Yiddish specifically Zamenhof s native Bialystok Northeastern dialect which had formed the basis of his abortive attempt to standardize that language Words with the digraph ei in German may in Esperanto have either ej seemingly corresponding to the spelling or aj seemingly corresponding to the pronunciation This pattern is not random but reflects ei and i in Old High German a distinction preserved in Yiddish hejmo home German Heim hajm but Yiddish הײם hejm fajfi whistle both German pfeifen p fajfen and Yiddish פ ײ פ ן fajfn 1 Zamenhof never admitted to a Yiddish influence in Esperanto presumably to avoid arousing antisemitic prejudice Many of the Latinate roots were given an Italianesque appearance corresponding to the use of Italian as a model for Esperanto pronunciation but in form are closer to French such as ĉemizo shirt French chemise ʃemiz Italian camicia kamit ʃa and ĉevalo horse French cheval ʃeval Italian cavallo kavallo Since Zamenhof s day a large amount of Latinate vocabulary has been added to the language In 1987 Mattos calculated that 84 of basic vocabulary was Latinate 14 Germanic and 2 Slavic or Greek 2 Latin and Greek edit Only a few roots were taken directly from the classical languages Latin sed but tamen however post after kvankam although kvazaŭ as though dum during nek nor aŭ or hodiaŭ today abio fir ardeo heron iri to go though this form survives in the future tense in French ira prujno frost the adverbial suffix e and perhaps the inherent vowels of the past and present tenses i and a Many lexical affixes are common to several languages and thus may not have a clear source but some such as inda worthy of ulo a person um undefined and op a number together may be Latin e g the Latin gerundive end the neuter inflection um Classical Greek kaj and from kai kai pri about from peri peri the plural suffix j the accusative case suffix n the inceptive prefix ek from ἐk ek and perhaps the jussive mood suffix u if that is not Hebrew Latin and Greek the suffix ido offspring from Latin ides and Greek idhs ides As in the examples of ardeo heron and abio fir above the names of most plants and animals are based on their binomial nomenclature and so many are Latin or Greek as well Slavic and Lithuanian edit Surprisingly few roots appear to have come from other modern European languages even those Zamenhof was most familiar with What follows is a fairly comprehensive list of such roots that do not also occur in principal languages Russian barakti to flounder from barahtatsya barahtatʹsja gladi to iron from gladit gladitʹ kartavi to pronounce a guttural R from kaptavit kartavitʹ deĵori to be on duty from dezhurit dezhyritʹ kolbaso a sausage from kolbasa kolbasa krom except from krome krome kruta steep from krutoj krutoj nepre without fail from nepremenno nepremenno vosto a tail from hvost hvost the pet name suffixes ĉjo and njo from chka cka and nka nʹka the augmentative suffix eg from yaga jaga and perhaps the collective suffix aro if this is not from Latin Polish barĉo borscht from barszcz ĉu whether from czy perhaps also Yiddish tsu eĉ even from jeszcze krado a grating from krata luti to solder from lutowac via moŝto your highness from mosc ol than possibly from od by analogy with al pilko a ball from pilka ŝelko suspenders from szelki Russian or Polish bulko a bread roll from bulka bulka bulka celo an aim goal from cel cѣl tselʹ cognates of German Ziel kaĉo porridge from kasza kasha kasa klopodi to undertake from klopot hlopotat khlopotatʹ po per from po po po pra proto from pra pra pra prava right in opinion from prawy pravyj pravyj svati to matchmake from swat svat svat Lithuanian tuj immediately from tuoj possibly also du two from du if not from Latin duo the suffix ope a number together cf dvejopas and ĝi it from ji jis However although few roots come directly from these languages Russian exerted a considerable substratum influence on the semantics of Esperanto An oft cited example is plena full complete which is Latinate in form French plein e Latin plen full but has the semantic range of Russian polnyj polnyi full complete as can be seen in the phrase plena vortaro a complete dictionary a usage not possible with the French or Latin words Other languages edit Other languages were only represented in the original vocabulary in so far as they were cognate with or as their words had become widespread in Esperanto s source languages However since that time many languages have contributed words for specialized or regional concepts such as haŝioj chopsticks from Japanese and boaco reindeer from Saami Obscure roots edit A few roots are obscure ĝi it s he ujo suffix for containers edzo husband Ĝi may possibly derive from the Lithuanian ji she it and jis he it 3 and ujo from the French etui case 4 Like another indirect German borrowing fraŭlo bachelor which derives from fraŭlino Miss from German fraulein less the feminine suffix in the Esperanto word edzo husband appears to be a back formation of edzino wife Zamenhof claimed the latter derives from kronprincedzino crown princess borrowed from the German Kronprinzessin and then internally analyzed as kron crown princ prince edzino wife 5 However Vilborg s Etimologia Vortaro argues that edzino is more likely to have come from Yiddish רביצין rebbetzin rabbi s wife Mrs reanalysed as rebb etzin and that Zamenhof made up the German etymology after the fact to avoid anti Semitic prejudice against Esperanto That would mean that edz ultimately derives from the Slavic feminine suffix its a Regardless few words have histories this convoluted The correlatives although clearly cognate with European languages for example kiel tiel with French quel which tel such ĉiu with Italian ciascun each and es with the German genitive es etc have been analogically leveled to the point that they are often given as examples of Esperanto innovations This is especially true for the indefinite forms like io something which were devised by iconically removing the consonant of the ki and ti forms Likewise the restriction of the Italian and Greek masculine noun and adjective ending o to nouns and the feminine noun and adjective ending a to adjectives and the article la is an Esperanto innovation using existing forms 6 Some smaller words have been modified to the extent that they re difficult to recognize For example Italian a ad to became al to under the influence of the Italian contraction al to the to better fit the phonotactics of Esperanto and in a parallel change Latin ex out of and Slavic od by than may have become el out of and ol than though the latter also has the German parallel als Inflections editThe Greek origin of the nominal inflections can be seen in the Greek a declension nouns such as the word for muse musa plural musai accusative musan which in Esperanto is muzo muzoj muzon Greek o declension words such as logos logoi logon word are similar as are adjectival declensions such as aksia aksiai aksian worthy Greek was perhaps also the model of stressed i in Esperanto words like familio family which follows the common Greek pattern of aksia worthy and oikiai houses Esperanto has a i o ablaut for present past future tense which has partial parallels in Latin present amat perfect amavit and the corresponding infinitives amare amavisse Otto Jespersen said of the ablaut This play of vowels is not an original idea of Zamenhof s as is os are found for the three tenses of the infinitive in Faiguet s system of 1765 a i o without a consonant are used like Z s as is os by Rudelle 1858 Courtonne in 1885 sic had am im om in the same values and the similarity with Esperanto is here even more perfect than in the other projects as um corresponds to Z s us An International Language 1928 There may have been a Volapuk influence as well or the two languages may have shared a common influence from earlier languages In Volapuk the vowels are present a future o past perfect i as well as imperfect a ɛ Esperanto retained a distinction between preterite is and imperfect es until 1887 the year the modern form of the language was published 7 Jespersen didn t parse all of the morphology 8 The ablaut for the five languages is as follows Faiguet 1765 2 Rudelle 1858 3 Volapuk 1880 Courtonne 1884 4 Esperanto 1887 present a a a 9 a a future y 10 o o o o past preterite i i i i 11 i imperfect e e ɛ 12 e old e conditional ju 13 u u subjunctive u 14 e uThe infinitive suffix i may derive from Latin deponent verbs such as loqui to speak With elements like these that are only one or two letters long it is difficult to know whether resemblances are due to the forms being related or just coincidence For example it is speculated that the jussive u is from the Hebrew imperative u but it could also be from the Greek u imperative of deponent verbs such as dekhou receive or perhaps it was inspired by u being found in both Hebrew and Greek Similarly adverbial e is found in Latin and Italian bene as well as in Russian after a palatalized consonant the participle bases t and nt are found in Latin Italian Greek and German and the pronominal base i is found in Italian mi ti vi si gli for Esperanto mi ci vi si li and English me we he she There are other parallels with prior constructed languages such as ili they the numerals un du tri and the feminine suffix in which are identical to Jean Pirro s Universalglot of 1868 but it s difficult to tell if there is a connection or if this is merely coincidence due to using similar source languages Technical vocabulary editModern international vocabulary much of it Latin or Greek in origin is of course used as well but frequently for a family of related words only the root will be borrowed directly and the rest will be derived from it using Esperanto means of word formation For example the computer term bit was borrowed directly as bito but byte was then derived by compounding bito with the numeral ok eight for the uniquely Esperanto word bitoko an octet of bits Although not a familiar form to speakers of European languages the transparency of its formation is helpful to those who do not have this advantage Moreover even bito has the synonym duumo based on du two and um the affix with undefined meaning With the exception of perhaps a hundred common or generic plant and animal names Esperanto adopts the international binomial nomenclature of living organisms using suitable orthography and changing the nominal and adjectival grammatical endings to o and a For example the binomial for the guineafowl is Numida meleagris In Esperanto therefore a numido would be any bird of the genus Numida and a meleagra numido the helmeted guineafowl specifically Likewise a numidedo is any bird in the guineafowl family Numididae Competing root forms editThere is some question over which inflection to use when assimilating Latin and Greek words Zamenhof generally preferred the oblique stem over the nominative singular form as in reĝo king which follows the Latin oblique forms with reg compare English regicide or floro flower as in floral rather than nominative singular rex and flos However European national standards differ in this regard resulting in debate over the form of later international borrowings such as whether the asteroid Pallas should be Palaso in Esperanto parallel to French and English names Pallas or Palado as in Italian Pallade Russian Pallada Pallada and the English adjective Palladian In some cases there are three possibilities as can be seen in the English noun helix x ks its plural helices c s and its adjective helical c k Although the resulting potential for conflict is frequently criticized it does present an opportunity to disambiguate what would otherwise be homonyms based on culturally specific and often fossilized metaphors For example Venuso the planet Venus may be distinguished from Venero the goddess Venus all three of the forms of Latin helix are found as Esperanto roots one with the original meaning and the other two representing old metaphors helico a spiral heliko a snail helikso the incurved rim of the ear Normally the Latin or Greek inflectional ending is replaced with the Esperanto inflectional ending o However the original inflection will occasionally be retained as if it were part of the root in order to disambiguate from a more common word For example a virus from Latin vir us is virus o instead of the expected vir o in order to avoid confusion with vir o a man and the Latin root corp us is the source of both korp o a living body and korpus o a military corps Similarly when the sound ĥ is replaced with k as it commonly is see Esperanto phonology the word ĥoro a chorus is replaced with koruso to avoid creating a homonym with koro a heart The redundant inflection may have been inspired by Lithuanian which otherwise contributed relatively little to Esperanto compare fokuso focus kokoso coconut lotuso lotus patoso pathos radiuso radius sinuso sine and viruso virus with Lithuanian fokusas kokosas lotosas patosas radiusas sinusas and virusas virus vs vyras man Traces of Proto Esperanto editProto Esperanto had voicing ablaut traces of which remain in a few pairs of words such as pezi to weigh to have weight and pesi to weigh to measure the weight Because little of Proto Esperanto has survived it is not clear which other aspects of Esperanto etymology might date to this period 15 Notes edit Christer Kiselman 2008 Andrzej Pelczar ed Esperanto its origins and early history PDF Prace Komisji Spraw Europejskich PAU Krakow Polska Akademia Umieje tno sci II 39 56 Mattos Geraldo La deveno de Esperanto Fonto 1987 Vilborg Floriano Pessoa 2005 Etimologio Skizo pri la deveno de la vortoj de Esperanto 1 Archived 2017 02 24 at the Wayback Machine Lingvaj Respondoj de Zamenhof Archived from the original on 2008 02 12 For speakers of Italian Spanish or Portuguese it may at first be jarring that Esperanto has the endings o and a of those languages but assigns them to differentiate nouns from adjectives rather than masculine from feminine However there are parallels within Romance In Provencal for example feminine nouns end in o but take the article la Provencal la fenestro the window Esperanto la fenestro Provencal la vido life Esperanto la vivo Provencal la roso la rozo the rose Esperanto la rozo Provencal la voio la vojo the road Esperanto la vojo etc Even in Spanish and Italian there are words with this pattern la mano the hand la foto the photo la radio the radio la dinamo the generator etc are common to Esperanto Spanish and Italian Christer Kiselman 2010 Variantoj de esperanto iniciatitaj de Zamenhof In Esperanto komenco aktualo kaj estonteco Archived 2016 03 05 at the Wayback Machine UEA The infinitive s in Faiguet drops in the indicative leaving a simple vowel and the m in Courtonne is the first person singular suffix Appears in the passive inflections there is no Volapuk present tense suffix in the active voice Spelled u but pronounced y as a French u Faiguet used o for the past perfect There is no simple past tense but i is used for the past subjunctive spelled a spelled iy replacement for French u spelled y present subjunctive Kiselman 2010 64 65 Bibliography editVilborg Ebbe Etimologia Vortaro de Esperanto Five volumes Stokholmo 1987 2001 Cherpillod Andre Konciza Etimologia Vortaro One volume Roterdamo 2003 External links editAndras Rajki Etymological Dictionary of the Esperanto Language Archived from the original on 2007 10 12 Note This dictionary should be used with caution For example amelo starch is given as a rare example of a Greek word that does not occur in Latin However it is not only a Latin derivation from amyl um but more directly derives from German amel Esperanto page dead link with a list of languages sorted by similarity of basic vocabulary EVOLAEMP Project University of Tubingen Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Esperanto etymology amp oldid 1213906001, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.