[Home]Ido

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Ido is a reformed version of the artificial language Esperanto. It was developed in the early 1900s, and still has a following today, primarily in Europe.

Ido inherits many of the same grammatical features of Esperanto, and in many cases the vocabulary is similar. Ido shares with Esperanto the goals of grammatical simplicity and consistency, ease of learning, and the use of loan words from various European languages. However, certain changes were introduced to address some of the concerns that had arisen about Esperanto. These include:

Grammar

Each word in the Ido vocabulary is built from a root word. A root word consist of a root and a grammatical ending. Other words can be formed from that word by removing the grammatical ending and adding a new one, or by inserting certain affixes between the root and the grammatical ending. Ido is grammatically invariable; there are no exceptions in Ido, unlike in natural languages.

Some of the grammatical endings are defined as follows:

much more about Ido grammar can be explained here, such as pronouns, affixes, references to the history of the language

History

Various parties who were interested in the subject of artificial languages convened the Delegation for the Adoption of an International Auxiliary Language in Paris in 1907 to discuss the adoption of a standard international language among the various competitors that had been devised up to that time. The committee decided that no language was completely acceptable, but that Esperanto could be accepted if certain modifications were adopted. Out of this project, the language Ido was ultimately developed.

The inventor of Esperanto, L. L. Zamenhof, as well as many of the language's supporters, resisted any effort at improving it, even though many of the reforms adopted by Ido were themselves suggested at one time by Zamenhof. The leading proponent of Ido, [Louis Couterat]?, was killed in an automobile accident in 1914, thus dealing a serious blow to the movement. However, the language still has speakers today, and the internet has brought renewed interest in the language.


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Edited December 18, 2001 1:15 am by 128.32.172.xxx (diff)
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