This part of Wikipedia is in Esperanto. For information about Esperanto the language, in English, see http://www.wikipedia.com/wiki/Esperanto. Also, free Esperanto courses are available at http://ttt.esperanto.org/espviva/ and http://www.pacujo.nu/esperanto/course/. |
This part of Wikipedia is in Esperanto. For information about Esperanto the language, in English, see http://www.wikipedia.com/wiki/Esperanto. There are several free Esperanto courses available on the Internet: *[Esperanto Viva] - lessons about the language and culture *[Curso de Esperanto] - computer program with sound files *[Free Esperanto Course] - the classic correspondence course |
The Esperanto Book by Don Harlow - http://www.webcom.com/~donh/eaccess/eaccess.book.html |
The Esperanto Book by Don Harlow - http://www.webcom.com/~donh/eaccess/eaccess.book.html |
Esperanto: A Language for the Global Village by Sylvan Zaft - http://members.aol.com/sylvanz/gvcont.htm |
Esperanto: A Language for the Global Village by Sylvan Zaft - http://members.aol.com/sylvanz/gvcont.htm |
About Language Problems by Claude Piron - http://www.geocities.com/c_piron/ |
About Language Problems by Claude Piron - http://www.geocities.com/c_piron/ |
For the English-language Wikipedia, see http://www.wikipedia.com/. For other language wikipedias, see Internacia Vikipedio.
English speakers may notice that the "last names" of people in this site are capitalized. That is not an error. In Esperanto culture, it is typical for the family name to be capitalized, so someone from the United States might write their name like Chuck SMITH, where the family name is last. However, a Chinese person would put their family name first like [ZHU Xin]?. This way we know which name is a person's family name.
The Esperanto Book by Don Harlow - http://www.webcom.com/~donh/eaccess/eaccess.book.html
Esperanto: A Language for the Global Village by Sylvan Zaft - http://members.aol.com/sylvanz/gvcont.htm
About Language Problems by Claude Piron - http://www.geocities.com/c_piron/