Dr. Esperanto’s International Language, Introduction and Complete Grammar

Dr. Esperanto’s International Language, Introduction and Complete Grammar

by L. L. Zamenhof

12 chapters2h 17mEsperanto1889

About this book

In July 1887, Esperanto made its debut as a 40-page pamphlet from Warsaw, published in Russian, Polish, French and German: all written by a Polish eye-doctor under the pen-name of Dr. Esperanto (“one who hopes”). Ludovic Lazarus Zamenhof (1859-1917) had a gift for languages, and a calling to help foster world amity: by a neutral “Internacia Lingvo” that anyone anywhere could readily use as a second language: neither forsaking a mother tongue, nor imposing it. In 1889 Zamenhof published an English translation by Richard H. Geoghegan, a young Irish linguist. All five are respectively considered the “First Book”. This classic sets forth Esperanto pretty much as we know it today (except that we no longer use internal apostrophes for composite words). Its original repertoire of 900 root words has grown tenfold in the past century, but you can still almost make do with the vocabulary herein. -- Summary by Gene Keyes

Chapters (11)

1Section 01
302
2Section 02
848
3Section 03
511
4Section 04
747
5Section 05
249
6Section 06
540
7Section 07
255
8Section 08
1337
9Section 09
562
10Section 10
1417
11Section 11
813

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