It’s a late afternoon on Tuesday at the Bluewall Cafe and Steven Brewer, the founding father of the Amherst Esperanto Club, is telling a story about a man he knows through Esperanto, Dave Coffin from ...
On February 16, 1905, America's first Esperanto club was founded in Boston. Polish physician L.L. Zamenhof created the new and simple language a few years before, an attempt at a universal language ...
Pardonu min…Ĉu vi parolas Esperanton?” is Esperanto for “Excuse me, do you speak Esperanto?” While most people will not understand this phrase, the language was created to be a universal tongue. In ...
The poster promised the moon. Stuck outside Mumbai University’s linguistics department, it said: “Keen to travel abroad without breaking the bank? Eager to give yourself a head start learning French, ...
There are at present about 60 members of the Esperanto Club, and these have been divided into groups of six which hold informal meetings once every two weeks to study the language. Great interest has ...
For a language meant to serve as a means of universal communication, Esperanto is frequently—and ironically—misunderstood. The most popular constructed language in the world was created in 1887 by L.L ...
NEW YORK — “Saluton,” was how members of the Esperanto Society of New York greeted each other as they arrived at their holiday party in Midtown Manhattan. They gathered to honor L.L. Zamenhof, the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results