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arpgme
Joined: 16 Oct 2006 Posts: 20
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Posted: Sat Jun 02, 2007 7:14 pm Post subject: Learn Aiola the most easiest language |
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[url]aiola.org[/url] |
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Guest
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Posted: Sun Jun 03, 2007 10:13 am Post subject: Me spouting off |
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You do know there's hundreds if not thousands of these 'auxiliary' languages. All of them promise the same things. And if you wanted to unite the world (and where's the fun in that?) you can't do it through "familiar vocabulary". Especially for those who're used to asian languages. In order for everyone to be on the same level, as far as ease, the language must be a priori. And if you're a UN sympathizer, you would hope that the UN could eventually have representation from every place imaginable. So stop working toward a language that only works well for current representation?
I used to work day and night on a language like this, for 4 years or so. Then one day I looked at it all... all the simplification, and whatnot... and the more I simplified, the more it resembled double-speak in its own way. No matter how you dice it, simplification always works against creativity. This shit is an ego trip. I'm sure it would be to someone's great satisfaction hearing everyone saying his words.
I rather like a world with different places and different languages. |
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Bob the Hamster OHRRPGCE Developer

Joined: 22 Feb 2003 Posts: 2526 Location: Hamster Republic (Southern California Enclave)
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Posted: Sun Jun 03, 2007 8:37 pm Post subject: |
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I studied Esperanto for a while, and really enjoyed it. Not because I think It is useful as a universal language, but because learning it taught me a lot about grammar, and elucidated structures in my own language which I used but did not understand.
Languages are living things. They have to grow and evolve. Creating them and expecting them to thrive in less than a couple thousand years is a bit unreasonable. |
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