Interlingue

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Interlingue
Occidental
Interlingue
Tilde de Occidental
Created byEdgar de Wahl
Date1922
SettingInternational auxiliary language
Early form
Auli
Language codes
ISO 639-1ie
ISO 639-2ile
ISO 639-3ile
Glottologinte1260
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Interlingue (Template:IPA-art; ISO 639 language codes ie, ile), known until 1949 as Occidental (Template:IPA-art), is an international auxiliary language created by Edgar de Wahl, a Baltic German naval officer and teacher from Tallinn, Estonia, and published in 1922. The vocabulary is based on already existing words from various languages and a system of derivation using recognized prefixes and suffixes.

The language is devised so that many of its derived word forms reflect the forms common to a number of Western European languages, primarily those in the Romance family,[1][2][3] along with a certain amount of Germanic vocabulary. Many words are formed using de Wahl's rule, a set of rules for regular conversion of all but six verb infinitives into derived words including from Latin double-stem verbs (e.g. vider to see and its derivative vision). The result is a naturalistic and mostly regular language that is easy to understand at first sight for individuals acquainted with certain Western European languages. This readability and simplified grammar along with the regular appearance of the magazine Cosmoglotta made Occidental popular in Europe during the years up to and shortly following World War II.[4]

Occidental survived World War II, but the community had been out of touch with the language's creator since 1939.[5] Having refused[6] to leave Tallinn for Germany, his house was destroyed in the 1943 air raids on the city and he took refuge in a psychiatric hospital.[7] There his correspondences were nearly entirely intercepted until his death in 1948,[8] leaving him largely unaware of the developments in the language. The name change from Occidental to Interlingue took place the following year. The proposal to change the name from Occidental to Interlingue was twofold: to attempt to demonstrate to the Soviet Union the neutrality of the language,[9][10][11] and for a possible union or closer collaboration with Interlingua,[12][13] a competing naturalistic project that was nearing publication. A significant number of users were lost following Interlingua's appearance in 1951,[14][15] beginning period of decline until the advent of the Internet.[16][17][14]

In The Esperanto Book, American Esperantist Don Harlow wrote that Occidental had an intentional emphasis on European forms, and that some of its leading followers espoused a Eurocentric philosophy,[18][19] which may have hindered its spread. Still, the opposite view[20][21][22] was also common in the community and Occidental gained adherents in many nations including Asian nations.[23][24]

History and activity

The first issue of Kosmoglott (later Cosmoglotta), published in haste after the announcement that the League of Nations was studying the problem of an international language.

Beginnings

The activities of the language and its users can be seen through the magazine Cosmoglotta, which began publication in 1922 in Tallinn, Estonia under the name Kosmoglott. The language that de Wahl announced that year was a product of years of personal experimentation under the name Auli (auxiliary language), which he used from 1906 to 1921 and which later on gained the nickname proto-Occidental.[25] During the development of the language de Wahl explained his approach in a letter to an acquaintance the Baron d'Orczy written in Auli: "My direction in the creation of a universal language seems quite regressive to you...I understand that quite well, because I am starting it right from the other end. I do not begin with the alphabet and the grammar and then have to adopt the vocabulary to it, but just the other way around: I take all international material of words, suffixes, endings, grammatical forms etc., and then I work to organize that material, put it in order, compile, interpolate, extrapolate and sift through it."[26] De Wahl also corresponded frequently with the Italian mathematician and creator of Latino sine flexione Giuseppe Peano and gained an appreciation for its selection of international vocabulary, writing that "I believe the "Vocabulario commune" book by Professor Peano to already be a more valuable and scientific work than the entire scholastic literature of Ido on imaginary things evoked by the "fundamento" of Zamenhof."[26]

Participants at an Occidental gathering in Vienna, 1928: Engelbert Pigal, Karl Janotta, A. Deminger, Hanns Hörbiger, Eugen Moess, Franz Houdek, Johann Robert Hörbiger
Meeting of Occidental (Interlingue) language users in Vienna in 1927.

Upon its announcement in 1922, Occidental was at a stage of near but not total completion.[27][28] De Wahl had not intended to announce the language for another few years but did so through the publication of Kosmoglott after hearing that the League of Nations had begun an inquiry into the question of an international language[29] and after receiving a favorable reply the year before from Under-Secretary General Nitobe Inazō of the League of Nations which had adopted a resolution on the subject on 15 September 1921.[30] The first known publication in Occidental, a booklet entitled "Transcendent algebra" by Jacob Linzbach, appeared shortly before the first issue of Kosmoglott in 1921.[31]

Occidental began gathering followers despite a complete lack of grammars and dictionaries[32] due to its readability. Two years later in 1924, de Wahl wrote that he was in correspondence with some 30 people[33] "in good Occidental" despite the lack of learning material. Two Ido societies joined Occidental in the same year, one in Vienna (Austria) called IdoSocieto Progreso (renamed as Societé Cosmoglott Progress) and the Societo Progreso in Brno (Czechoslovakia), which changed its name to Federali (Federation del amicos del lingue international).[34] The first dictionary was published the next year in 1925, the radicarium directiv[35] which was a collection of Occidental root words and their equivalents in 8 languages.

Kosmoglott was also a forum for various other planned languages, while still mainly written in Occidental. Until 1924 the magazine was also affiliated with the Academia pro Interlingua,[36] which promoted Peano's Latino sine flexione. The name was changed to Cosmoglotta in 1927 as it began to officially promote Occidental in lieu of other languages,[37] and in January of the same year[38] the magazine's editorial and administrative office was moved to Vienna, Austria in the region of Mauer, now part of Liesing. Much of the early success for Occidental in this period came from the office's new central location, along with the efforts of Engelbert Pigal, also from Austria, whose article Li Ovre de Edgar de Wahl (The Work of Edgar de Wahl) led to interest in Occidental from users of the Ido language.[38] By early 1930, the language was largely based in Germany, Austria, Sweden, Czechoslovakia, Switzerland, and most recently in France where it began to be used two years before.[39]

Vienna period, World War II and language standardization

PR postcard with Occidental text created in 1928 in Vienna

Besides an advantageous new location in a city closer to the centre of Europe, the Vienna period was also marked by financial stability for the first time. Two notable backers were Hans Hörbiger, also from Vienna, and G.A. Moore from London, from which "Cosmoglotta was able to live without difficulty and gained a circle of readers despite the economic crisis".[40] This did not last long as Hörbiger and Moore both died in 1931, and Cosmoglotta was again forced to rely on revenue from subscriptions, publications and the like.

The growing movement began a more assertive campaign for the language in the early 1930s[41] in which it leveraged its at-sight readability by contacting organizations such as companies, embassies, printing houses and the League of Nations using letters entirely in Occidental that were often understood and responded to,[42][43] often including the footer Scrit in lingue international "Occidental" ("Written in the international language Occidental"). A large number of numbered "documents"[44] were produced at this time as well to introduce the concept of an international language and advocate Occidental as the answer to Europe's "tower of Babel".[45] Recordings of spoken Occidental on phonograph (gramophone) records for distribution also began to be made in this period.[46][47]

The years from 1935 to 1939 were particularly active for Cosmoglotta, during which a second edition of the journal was published. Originally entitled Cosmoglotta-Informationes,[48] it soon began using the name Cosmoglotta B and focused on items of more internal interest such as linguistic issues, reports of Occidental in the news, and financial updates. In early 1936, not counting the 110 issues of Cosmoglotta and any other journals and bulletins, a total of 80 publications[49][50] existed in and about Occidental.

Meanwhile, the years leading up to the Second World War led to difficulties for Occidental and other planned languages which were made illegal in Germany,[51] Austria[52] and Czechoslovakia, forced to disband,[53] kept under Gestapo surveillance,[54] and had their didactic materials destroyed.[55] The interdiction of auxiliary languages in Germany was particularly damaging as this was where most Occidentalists lived at the time.[56] The inability to accept payment for subscriptions was a financial blow, and a difficulty that continued after the war[57] along with Germany's division into zones of influence, not all of which allowed payments.[58] No communication took place between Edgar de Wahl in Tallinn and the Occidental Union in Switzerland from 1939 to October 1947,[59] first due to the war itself and thereafter from intercepted mail between Switzerland and the Soviet Union. Unaware of this, de Wahl was bewildered at the lack of response to his continued letters and even a large collection of translated poetry into Occidental which were never delivered; the only letter of his received in Switzerland was one that arrived in 1947 asking the Occidental Union "why it never responded to any letters from Tallinn".[60] Meanwhile, de Wahl's house and his entire library had been destroyed during the bombardment of Tallinn and de Wahl himself was incarcerated for a time after refusing to leave Estonia for Germany.[61]

The outbreak of war in 1939 put a halt to publications of both Cosmoglottas extending into 1940, but in 1941 Cosmoglotta B began publication once again and continued until 1950.[62] An edition of either Cosmoglotta A or B was published every month between January 1937 and September 1939, and then (after the initial shock of the war) every month from September 1941 to June 1951.[62] During the wartime period, only those in neutral Switzerland and Sweden were able to fully devote themselves to the language, carrying on activities in a semi-official form.

One of these activities was language standardization. De Wahl had created Occidental with a number of unchangeable features, but believed that its following of the "laws of life" gave it a firm enough base that it could follow a "natural evolution"[63] with a flexibility which would "allow time and practice to take care of modifications that would prove to be necessary".[64] As a result, some words had more than one permissible form and could not be resolved by decree alone, thus leaving the ultimate decision to the community by including both possible forms in the first Occidental dictionaries.[65] One example concerned the verb scrir (to write) and a possible other form scripter, as both created internationally recognizable derivations: scritura and scritor from scrir, or scriptura and scriptor from scripter. De Wahl expressed a preference for scrir, finding scripter to be somewhat heavy, but commented that the latter was certainly permissible and that Occidental might take on a similar evolution to natural languages in which both forms come into common use, with the longer and more Latin-like form having a heavier and more formal character and the shorter a lighter and more everyday tone (such as English story vs. history).[66]

Orthography was another area in which several possibilities existed, namely etymologic orthography (adtractiv, obpression), historic orthography (attractiv, oppression), or simplified orthography (atractiv, opression).[67] The first option was hardly if ever used, and simplified orthography eventually became the standard by 1939.[68] Much of the standardization of the language took place in this way through community preference (e.g. both ac[69] and anc were proposed for the word "also" but the community quickly settled on anc), but not all. With questions still remaining about the official form of some words and a lack of general material destined for the general public,[70] much time during World War II was spent on language standardization and course creation, and in August 1943 the decision was made, given the length of the war, to create an interim academy to officialize this process.[71] This process had just about begun not long before the war,[72][73] and the Swiss Occidentalists, finding themselves isolated from the rest of the continent, opted to concentrate on didactic materials to have prepared by the time the war reached its end. While doing so, they frequently found themselves confronted with the decision between two "theoretically equally good" forms that had remained in popular usage, but whose presence could be confusing to a new learner of the language.[74] During this time, the academy maintained that standardization efforts were based on actual usage, stating that "...the standardization of the language has natural limits. "Standardizing" the language does not mean arbitrarily officializing one of the possible solutions and rejecting the others as indesirable and irritating. One only standardizes solutions that have already been sanctioned through practice."[75]

During the war, Occidentalists noticed that the language was often permitted to be sent by telegram within and outside of Switzerland (especially to and from Sweden)[76] even without official recognition, surmising that censors were able to understand it[77] and may have thought them to be written in Spanish or Romansch,[78] a minor yet official language in Switzerland that at the time lacked a standardized orthography. This allowed a certain amount of communication to take place between the Occidentalists in Switzerland and Sweden. The other centres of Occidental activity in Europe did not fare as well, with the stocks of study materials in Vienna and Tallinn having been destroyed in bombings[79] and numerous Occidentalists sent to concentration camps[80][81] in Germany and Czechoslovakia. Contacts were reestablished shortly after the war by those who had survived it, particularly from those in France, Czechoslovakia, and Great Britain. Cosmoglotta had subscribers in 58 cities in Switzerland[82] a few months before the end of World War II in Europe, and Cosmoglotta A began publication again in 1946.

IALA, Interlingua, and name change to Interlingue

The International Auxiliary Language Association, founded in 1924[83] to study and determine the best planned language for international communication, was at first viewed with suspicion by the Occidental community. The co-founder of the IALA Alice Vanderbilt Morris was an Esperantist, as were many of its staff members,[84] and many Occidentalists including Edgar de Wahl himself[84] believed that its leadership under Esperantist William Edward Collinson (known among readers of Cosmoglotta for an article of his entitled "Some weak points of Occidental"[85]) meant that it had been set up with a staff of professional linguists under a neutral and scientific pretext to bolster a final recommendation for Esperanto. Relations soon improved, however, as it became clear that the IALA intended to be as impartial as possible by familiarizing itself with all existing planned languages. Ric Berger, a prominent Occidentalist who later joined Interlingua in the 1950s, detailed one such visit he made in 1935 to Morris (whose husband was the US ambassador in Brussels) that vastly improved his opinion of the organization:

My personal opinion was not so pessimistic, for, finding myself in Brussels in 1935, I sought out Mrs. Morris and soon obtained an audience with her where my charming host invited me to speak in Occidental. She asked her husband, the American ambassador, to come hear me to confirm what seemed to very much interest them: a language in which all words can be understood without having learned it! ... Mrs. Morris could have used her fortune to simply support Esperanto, which was her right as a convicted Esperantist. But instead of that she...decided to donate her money to a neutral linguistic tribunal to solve the problem scientifically, even if the judgement goes against her convictions.[86]

As a result, opinions in the Occidental community of the IALA and its activities began to improve and reports on its activities in Cosmoglotta became increasingly positive. In 1945, the IALA announced that it planned to create its own language and showed four possible versions under consideration, all of which were naturalistic[87] as opposed to schematic. Occidentalists were by and large pleased that the IALA had decided to create a language so similar in nature to Occidental, seeing it as a credible association that gave weight to their argument that an auxiliary language should proceed from study of natural languages instead of attempting to fit them into an artificial system. Ric Berger was particularly positive in describing the situation as a victory for the natural school ("Li naturalitá esset victoriosi!")[87] and calling IALA's new language "almost the same language" in 1948,[88] though was not without reservations, doubting whether a project with such a similar aspect and structure would be able to "suddenly cause prejudices [against planned languages] to fall and create unity among the partisans of international languages"[89] and fearing that it might simply "disperse the partisans of the natural language with nothing to show for it"[89] after Occidental had created "unity in the naturalistic school" for so long.

While the two languages had a 90% identical vocabulary[90] without orthographic differences taken into account (e.g. with filosofie and philosophia considered the same word), structurally and derivationally they were very different. De Wahl's Rule in Occidental had mostly done away with Latin double stem verbs (verbs such as act: ager, act- or send: mitter, miss-), while Interlingua simply accepted them as part and parcel of a naturalistic system.[91] The control languages (Italian, Spanish and/or Portuguese, French, English) used by Interlingua to form its vocabulary for the most part require an eligible word to be found in three source languages (the "rule of three"),[92] which would conflict with Occidental's Germanic substrate and various other words which would be by definition ineligible in a unified language that retained Interlingua's methodology. Accepting Occidental words such as mann, strax, old and sestra (Interlingua: viro, immediatemente, vetere, soror) into Interlingua could only be done by doing away with the control languages, the very core of Interlingua's methodology for determining its vocabulary. Interlingua also allowed optional irregular verbal conjugations (such as so, son and sia[93] as the first-person singular, third-person plural and subjunctive form of esser, the verb 'to be') that Occidental had never even considered and viewed as incompatible with an easy international auxiliary language.

All of this took place in a time when Occidental, based in Europe, was still recovering from the war. Cosmoglotta continued to report into 1946 on those who had survived the war and who had not, those who were ready to participate again and those who were still out of touch.[94][95] The magazine was showing financial strain with inflated printing costs after the end of World War II and the inability to collect payments from certain countries,[96] a marked contrast to the well-funded[18] IALA which was based in New York.

Another difficulty for the post-war Occidentalists was political. The beginning of the Cold War created a particularly uncomfortable situation for the Occidental-Union, which now possessed a name that by unfortunate chance coincided with that of an anti-Russian political league, and which the Occidentalists in Switzerland believed to be the reason for the interception of all of de Wahl's letters sent from Tallinn.[97] In early 1948 the Czechoslovak Occidentalists had begun requesting approval for a new name that would allow them to continue their linguistic activities without suspicion, proposing the name Interal (International auxiliari lingue), to which the union responded that the term Interlingue would be more appropriate and that they were free to introduce the language as Interlingue (Occidental), or even remove the mention of Occidental in parentheses if they felt it necessary.[98] Ric Berger began advocating for a change of name from Occidental to Interlingue in 1948.[99] The official vote on the name change to Interlingue took place at the plenum of the Occidental Union in 1949 and was passed with 91% support, making the official name Interlingue, with Interlingue (Occidental) also permitted, valid as of 1 September 1949.[100]

The year 1951 when Interlingua was announced was consequential in weakening Interlingue-Occidental, which until then had been unchallenged in the field of naturalistic planned auxiliary languages. Vĕra Barandovská-Frank's perception of the situation at the time was as follows (translated from Esperanto):

"In the field of naturalistic planned languages Occidental-Interlingue was until then unchallenged (especially after the death of Otto Jespersen, author of Novial), as all new projects were nearly imitations of it. This applied to Interlingua as well, but it carried with it a dictionary of 27 000 words put together by professional linguists that brought great respect, despite in principle only confirming the path that De Wahl had started. The Senate of the Interlingue-Union and the Interlingue-Academie took up the proposals that (1) the Interlingue-Union become a collective member of the IALA and (2) the Interlingue-Union remain favourable to the future activity of the IALA and morally support it. The first proposition was not accepted, but the second was, giving a practical collaboration and support to Interlingua.
André Martinet, the second-last director of the IALA, made similar observations to those of Matejka. He confessed that his preferred variant of Interlingua was the one closer to Interlingue than the one officialized by Gode. In these circumstances the efforts by Ric Berger to move all users of Interlingue en masse to Interlingua de IALA was a shock. His heresy caused doubt and interruptions in Interlingue circles, especially after he became involved in the publication of "Revista de Interlingua". The former idea of a natural fusion of both languages was shown to be unrealistic, with the new language becoming a rival."[101]

Don Harlow's summary of the year 1951 for Occidental[18] is also similar to that of Barandovská-Frank's:

Interlingua had a ready-made constituency. Almost thirty years had passed since the creation of Occidental, whose strength in the "naturalistic" world had prevented other "naturalistic" projects from developing their own movements. But Occidental's star had waned since the war. Now, like a bolt from the blue, came this heaven-sent gift: a new constructed language even more "naturalistic" than Occidental. In spite of attempts by diehard supporters of Occidental to stave off the inevitable — for instance, by such tactics as renaming their language Interlingue — most remaining Occidentalists made the short pilgrimage to the shrine of Interlingua.

Stagnation and revival

Issue 325 of Cosmoglotta for the period January to December 2019.

While the migration of so many users to Interlingua had severely weakened the Interlingue movement, the following drop in activity was gradual and took place over decades. Cosmoglotta B stopped publishing after 1950, and frequency of publication for Cosmoglotta A began to gradually drop: once every second month from 1952, and then once per quarter from 1963.[62] Other bulletins in Interlingue continued to appear during this time such as Cive del Munde (Switzerland), Voce de Praha (Czechoslovakia), Sved Interlinguist (Sweden), International Memorandum (UK), Interlinguistic Novas (France), Jurnale Scolari International (France), Buletine Pedagogic International (Francia), Super li Frontieras (France), Interlingue-Postillon (1958, Germany), Novas de Oriente (1958, Japan), Amicitie european (1959, Switzerland), Teorie e practica (Switzerland-Czechoslovakia, 1967), and Novas in Interlingue (Czechoslovakia, 1971).[101] Barandovská-Frank believed that the ebb in interest in Occidental-Interlingue occurred in concert with the aging of the generation that was first drawn to it from other planned languages (translated from Esperanto):

Most of those interested in Interlingue belonged to the generation that became acquainted in turn with Volapük, Esperanto and Ido, later on finding the most aesthetic (essentially naturalistic) solution in Occidental-Interlingue. Many subsequently moved to IALA's Interlingua, which however did not prove to be much more successful despite the impression its scientific origin made, and those who remained loyal to Occidental-Interlingue did not succeed in imparting their enthusiasm to a new generation.[101]

Activity in Interlingue eventually reached a low during the 1980s and early 1990s, when Cosmoglotta publication ceased for a number of years. This can be seen in the frequency of Cosmoglotta: while issue 269 was published in 1972 after publishing once per season between 1963,[62] issue 289 was not reached until summer 2000[102] for an average of less than one issue per year. According to Esperantist Don Harlow, "in 1985 Occidental's last periodical, Cosmoglotta, ceased publication, and its editor, Mr. Adrian Pilgrim, is quoted as having described Occidental as a 'dead language.'"[18] A decade later, a documentary in 1994[103] by Steve Hawley and Steyger on planned languages introduced Interlingue speaker Donald Gasper as "one of the last remaining speakers of the language Occidental".

As was the case for other planned languages, it was the arrival of the internet that allowed the language to revive. In the year 1999 the first Yahoo! Group in Occidental was founded,[104] and Cosmoglotta had been publishing intermittently again. An Interlingue Wikipedia was approved in 2004. In recent years official meetings between Interlingue speakers have begun taking place again: a meeting in Ulm on 10 January 2013,[105] another in Munich in 2014 with three participants,[106] and a third in Ulm on 16 August 2015 with five.[107]

The most recent edition of the magazine Cosmoglotta is volume 325, for the period January to December 2019.

Language philosophy

Sticker from 1930 created to emphasize readability at first sight: Li lingue quel vu comprende (The language you understand) and Occidental propaga se self (Occidental promotes itself)

Edgar de Wahl was first introduced to planned languages through Volapük by Waldemar Rosenberger, a coworker of de Wahl's father.[108] De Wahl ended up becoming one of the earliest users of the language Esperanto, which he encountered for the first time in 1888 during his period as a Volapükist and for which he was in the process of composing a dictionary of marine terms.[108] He quickly became a fervent supporter of Esperanto for a number of years where he collaborated with Zamenhof on some parts of the design of the language[109] and translated one of the first works into Esperanto: "Princidino Mary",[110] published in 1889 originally under the name Princino Mary. He remained an Esperantist until 1894 when the vote to reform Esperanto failed. In this vote, de Wahl was one of just two that voted neither for Esperanto unchanged, nor for the reform proposed by Zamenhof, but for a completely new reform.[111] Occidental would not be announced for a full 28 years after de Wahl had abandoned Esperanto, a period in which he spent working with other language creators and trying to develop a system that combined both naturalism and regularity. Some of the language creators he worked with were Waldemar Rosenberger (Idiom Neutral), Julius Lott (Mundolingue), and Antoni Grabowski (Modern Latin for a time, before returning to Esperanto).[112] The method sought after by these "partisans of naturalism" was the decomposition of existing words into their parts to obtain the international roots within them, such as naturalisation to nat-ur-al-is-ation, which would then be used in other words to keep root words to a minimum while maintaining a natural appearance: precie (price), preciosi (precious), apreciar (to appreciate), apreciation (appreciation), apreciabil (appreciable), despreciar (to depreciate), despreciation (depreciation).[113] This decomposition of existing words gave rise to a large number of affixes. For example, just those used to form nouns referring to a type of person are as follows: -er- (molinero - miller), -or- (redactor - editor), -ari- (millionario - millionaire), -on- (spion, spy), -ard (mentard, liar), -astr- (poetastro, lousy poet), -es (franceso, Frenchman), -essa (reyessa, queen). In de Wahl's opinion it was always preferable to opt for a productive suffix than to be forced to coin new words from completely new radicals later on.[114] In addition to this, de Wahl's rule developed later allowed for regular derivation from double-stem Latin verbs.[115]

The Delegation for the Adoption of an International Auxiliary Language, a body of academics formed to study the problem of an international language and which recommended Esperanto with reforms (leading to the language known as Ido) occurred in 1907 before Occidental was ready to be announced. Given this, de Wahl chose to send a memorandum of principles on which to base an international language, a memorandum which arrived after the committee had already adjourned[116] and which was only noted in passing by Louis Couturat, who was already familiar with de Wahl and his collaborators. The principles stated in the memorandum[117] are listed in a request for the committee to declare:

1. that none of the existing systems are satisfactory;

2. that the international language to construct should be based on international material;

3. that it should have a precise system of formation of words which, by its own rules, obtains words which are truly international;

4 that it should have a natural grammar that produces no unnatural forms;

5. that it should have an international ortography.

De Wahl published in 1922 a modification of Otto Jespersen's famously cited principle that "That international language is best which in every point offers the greatest facility to the greatest number",[118] stating that the international language should be easiest for the majority of those who need it (lit. who must apply it),[119] or in other words those that need it in international relations.[120] De Wahl believed that number of speakers did not always need to be taken into account, particularly in specialized areas such as botony where for example the term Oenethera biennis (a type of plant) should be implemented unchanged in an international language even if the entire world population of botanists, those most often familiar with and likely to use the word, did not exceed 10,000.[119] This also implied that words belonging to particular cultures should be imported without modifications, which De Wahl believed brought new ideas of value to European culture that had become "sick" after the First World War. He cited the terms karma, ko-tau (kowtow), geisha, and mahdí in 1924 as examples of those that should not be put in a "vocalic corset"[22] through obligatory endings (e.g. karmo, koŭtoŭo, gejŝo, madho in Esperanto) when imported into the international language: "Such words, still not large in number, have seen a large increase in the past century, and in the future will grow in exorbitant proportion when, through international communication, the ideas of stable Oriental cultures will inundate and influence the sick Europe, which is now losing its equilibrium. And the more mutilated the words are, the more mutilated will be the ideas that they represent."[22] In an article on the future development of language, de Wahl wrote in 1927 that due to European dominance in the sciences and other areas Occidental required a form and derivation recognizable to Europeans, but that it should also be fitted with a grammatical structure capable of taking on more analytical, non-derived forms in the future (such as the equivalents of "bake man" for baker or "wise way" for wisdom[121]) if worldwide linguistic trends began to show a preference for them.

De Wahl believed that there was a fine balance to be maintained between schematic regularity versus naturalism in an international language, where too much of the former may be convenient for the early learner but abhorrent for a speaker, and vice versa: "Exceptions are not made to make study more difficult for foreigners, but to make speaking shorter and more fluid....It is clear that in this language as the most impersonal, abstract and businesslike one of all, regularity will be greater and more expanded than in all other national and tribal languages and idioms. But it will never be able to attain a total schematism...Also here the real solution will be a harmonization of the two contrary principles. It requires the sensitive penetration of the real necessity in the instinct of the international superpopulation."[122]

While primarily Romance in vocabulary, de Wahl opted for a large Germanic substrate which he felt more expressive for technical and material vocabulary (self, ost (east), svimmar (to swim), moss, etc.), with Romance and Greek vocabulary more appropriate in the derivation of international words (fémina for woman to form feminin, can for dog to form canin (canine), etc.) as well as mental, corporal and natural conceptions.[123] Minor Romance languages such as Ladin, Provençal (Occitan) and Catalan along with creoles had a large importance in the development of Occidental for de Wahl,[124][125] who wrote as far back as 1912 that his language under development was more similar to Provençal than Italian or Spanish.[126] The Swiss magazine Der Landbote made a similar comment in 1945 in a review of the language, commenting humoristically that "reading through the few examples of Occidental gives us the impression of a half-learned Catalan by a foreigner who doesn't much understand the grammar."[127]

De Wahl took pains to stress that Occidental's natural appearance did not imply wholesale importing of national expressions and usage, and warned that doing so would lead to chaos. One of his articles on this subject was directed toward English and French users who he believed incorrectly saw Occidental as a mix of the two: "(Occidental's chaotic appearance) is not the fault of Occidental itself, but rather that of its users and especially the French and English, or those that think that the international language should be a mixture of those two languages...that is a fundamental error, especially if these forms present exceptions and irregularities in Occidental's system."[128] Alphonse Matejka wrote in Cosmoglotta that de Wahl "always claimed a minimum of autonomy for his language and bitterly fought against all propositions that intended to augment the naturalism of the language only by blindly imitating the Romance languages, or as de Wahl said crudely in one of his letters to me, 'by aping French or English'".[129]

Occidental's erring on the side of regularity led to vocabulary that was still recognizable but different from the international norm, such as ínpossibil in place of impossibil (ín + poss + ibil), scientic (scientific, from scient-ie + -ic), and descrition (description, from descri-r + -tion). This is one of the greatest differences between it and Interlingua, which has a vocabulary taken from so-called 'prototypes'[130] (the most recent common ancestor to its source languages) while Interlingue/Occidental focused on active, on the fly derivation. Vocabulary was deemed technically permissible even if it did not match forms in other living languages, with these derived words described as "forms that living languages would have been able to produce using their own means".[131] After the standardization of Occidental in 1947 and the name change to Interlingue in 1949 there was a push towards greater and greater naturalistic forms[132] inspired by the IALA's soon-to-be-published Interlingua, particularly by Ric Berger who advocated replacing the optional -i adjectival ending with -e.[133] After advocating for the change in April 1949 he began implementing it the following month in his own writing and most of the content in Cosmoglotta, in addition to other changes such as nostre (our) and vostre (your) instead of nor and vor. The following April he defended the changes, denying that they were a "concession to the IALA" but instead a simple "concession to the general tendency towards greater naturalism found today in the interlinguistic movement", calling critics of the changes victims of "long-lasting habits" and an "optical illusion".[134] Whether these experimental changes would have taken root is not known, as Berger left his position as editor of Cosmoglotta soon after[135] and eventually joined Interlingua, while the language returned to the 1947 standard that continues to this day.

Vocabulary Examples

Though seemingly favourable to the Romance language family, Edgar de Wahl did not see Occidental as a Romance language and did not tolerate any nationalism or chauvinism in the choice of words for the language. His opinion on justice in the choice of vocabulary was that: "However many special, new, significant words each [culture] has respectively added to the common human culture, that much they receive."[136] Below are examples he provided of source languages and what they are particularly known for around the world (why they are included in Occidental).

Category / Reasoning Origin Words
Examples of the non-Romance substrate in the language Anglo-Germanic storc, mann, self, yelb, svimmar, helm, svin, moss, segle, ost, west, nord, strax, sparro, fox, spat, spruzzar, scum, stal, stall, stamp, strec, stripp, stropp, strump, stupp, watch, winch, vrec, yufte, rasp, scote, pretti, litti, plug, spad, mis-, milz, mast, stir, bote, steve, tacle, strand
Science and philosophy Greek teorema, trigonometrie, teosofie, pleuritis, biologie, astronomie
Life, physics, society, politics, law Latin pedale, manuscrit, cap, cordial, influentie, civil, social, comission, comunisme, republica, construction, conductor, privat, stabil
Music and economy Italian presto, andante, staccato, maestro, virtuos, violoncello; tratte, bilancie, giro-conto, agio, bankrott
High society, modern army organization French politesse, hotel, menú, manchette, jabot, maitresse, couplet, courtoisie, dinear, frac, robe; general, colonel, corporal, sargeant
Navigation Scandinavian, Dutch, English log, fregatte, luv, bote, mast, tacle, steve, stir, stropp, kil, reff; top, clamp, brigg, clippes, winch, watch, foc
Sport English champion, start, ténnis, hockey, jockey, turf, set, game
Unchained authoritarianism Russian tsar, ukas, knut, bolchevic, pogrom
Inquisition, showy chivalric pride Spanish autodafé, hidalgo, Don Quijote, toreador, matador, mantille
Technology and industry Germanic scruv, muff, vind, spul, falun, flint-glass, warf, staple
Cultural flowerings or names of things, plants and animals of certain lands Hebrews sabat, cherub, delta, camel, ámen, elefant, jubilar, mammon, seraf, manna, hosanna, golem, kósher
Arabs alcohol, magazin, balsam, arsenale, admirale, tara, café, safran, koran, kadi, minaret, alcove, alcali, alchimie, algebra
Turks sultan, fez, pasha, yatagan, bashibuzuk, bashlyk
Persian bakshish, bazar, págode, divan, turban, serai, shah, vezir
Hindus nirvana, karma, calicó, rum, punch, raja, bayadera, batic
Malaysians orang-utan, maki, tabú
Japanese geisha, samurai, harakiri, kimono, bushido, micado, riksha
Chinese té, mandarine, kotau, silk, bonze, caolin, dshonke
Mongols dalai-lama
American Indians wigwam, mocassine, cocain, tabac, cigar, chocolate, cacáo, cannibale, colibrí, orcan, hamac, creol
Black Americans jazz
Black Africans tse-tse, quagga, zebra
Australians cangurú, bumerang, moa, barramuda

Symbol

The symbol of Occidental and its dimensions[137] were chosen in 1936 after some deliberation and many other proposed symbols that included stylized letters, a star (as in Esperanto and Ido), a setting sun to represent the sun in the west (the Occident), a globe, and more.[138] The tilde, already used by the Occidental-Union, was eventually selected based on five criteria:[139] symbolic character, simplicity, originality, inconfusability, and for being bichromatic (having two colours) as opposed to polychromatic. Beyond the five criteria, the Occidentalists at the time referenced the advantages of the lack of a fixed meaning for the tilde in the public sphere, and its similarity to a waveform, implying speech.[139]

Alphabet and pronunciation

Interlingue is written with 26 Latin letters: a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, o, p, q, r, s, t, u, v, w, x, y, z. The letters of the alphabet are pronounced as a, be, ce, de, e, ef, ge, ha, i, jot, ka, el, em, en, o, pe, qu, er, es, te, u, ve, duplic ve, ix, ypsilon, and zet.[140] Accents are written on the five vowels to indicate irregular stress, with the grave accent (á é í ó ú) preferred, but others (è, ê, etc.) permitted.[140]

Pronunciation

The vowels a, e, i, o, and u have a continental pronunciation and are all sounded. The y (initial and medial) are pronounced as in "yes", ey (final) as in "they", and eu as éh-oo.[141]

Rough equivalents for the vowels are as follows:[140]

  • a as in French, German, Spanish or Italian, or English father.
  • e open or closed, as German, Spanish or Italian, or English bed and yes.
  • i as French, German, Spanish and Italian, or English machine.
  • o open or closed as in French, German, Spanish and Italian, or English door, hot.
  • u as in German, Spanish and Italian, or English rule, pull. U after q is a short, almost consonantal (w).
  • y is a consonant after a vowel or beginning a word before a vowel, otherwise is pronounced as i.

Interlingue has non-obligatory vowel length, based on a few rules of thumb that include the following:[140]

  • Accented vowels tend to be long: e in idé, o in sonori, a in dramatic.
  • Vowels before a final c, ch or x, other consonant clusters and vowels in short grammatical particles tend to be short: a in mann, o in storc, i in in and it.

The consonants are pronounced as in English, with the following exceptions:[141]

  • c when before e and i = [ts]: cive, helice
  • g when before e and i = [ʒ], French j, or English s in pleasure: plage, giraffe; but elsewhere c and g are hard as in can, go
  • ss = [s] as in pass
  • s between vowels = [z]: rose, positiv
  • z = [dz]
  • zz = [ts]
  • ch = [ʃ], English sh: chambre
  • j = [ʒ], French j, or English s in pleasure
  • t as [t], except when followed by ia, io, iu, or ie and not preceded by an s. Thus the t in nation is pronounced [ts] but in bastion as [t].

Other doubled consonants are pronounced as a single consonant, unless when separated they would be pronounced differently. Ex. grammatica is pronounced as if written gramatica, but occidental and suggestion are pronounced as if written as oc followed by cidental, and sug followed by gestion.

Stress

Words are generally stressed on the vowel before the final consonant:[142] intercalar, parol, forme. Pluralizing a noun does not change the stress: paroles, formes. The endings -bil, -ic, -im, -ul and -um do not change the stress (even when more than one is present in a single word), nor does the adverbial ending -men: rapidmen, duplic, bonissim, singul, possibil, maximum, statisticas. Two vowels together are diphthongized and do not count as two syllables for the purpose of stress: familie, potentie, unless the word is a single consonant or consonant cluster followed by two vowels: die, deo. Compound words are stressed based on the last word in the compound: hodie, substrae. In cases where the accent is irregular, it is indicated by an accent: café, ínpossibil, numeró, númere, felicitá.

The accent mark is also sometimes used to stress a word (In un casu li naves proveni de ún state = In one case the ships originate from one country), or over the particles ú when used as a conjunction, ó when used to mean 'either' (ó A, ó B), and é when used to mean 'both' (é A, é B). Examples: Yo ne save u il es (I don't know where he is), Yo vole trincar e lacte e bir (I want to drink both milk and beer) and O il ne save li loc, o il ne vole venir (Either he does not know the location or he does not want to come) will sometimes be seen written as Yo ne save ú il es, Yo vole trincar é lacte é bir, and Ó il ne save li loc, ó il ne vole venir.

Grammar

Like English, Interlingue has a definite article and an indefinite article. The definite article (the) is li, and the indefinite (a, an) is un. Plural of a noun is made by adding -s after a vowel, or -es after most consonants.[141] To avoid pronunciation and stress changes, words ending in -c, -g, and -m only add an -s: un libre, du libres, un angul, tri angules, li tric, li trics, li plug, li plugs, li album, pluri albums, li tram, du trams.

The ending of the definite article can be modified to lo (masculine), la (feminine), lu (neuter), lis (plural), los (masculine plural), e las (feminine plural).[143] Of these, the forms lu and lis are most common: lu in the same sense as Spanish lo and English that which, as in Ne li aprension de un lingue es lu essential, ma su usation (that which is essential is not the learning of a language, but using it), and lis to pluralize words that are difficult to pluralize on their own: lis s (the s's).

Personal pronouns

Interlingue has two forms for the personal pronouns: one for the subject form (nominative), and one for the object form (accusative or dative).

first second third

(neutral)

third

(fem.)

third

(masculine)

ie en ie en ie en ie en ie en
Singular Subject yo I tu thee it it ella she il he
Object me me te thou it it la her le him
Possessive mi my tui thy su its su her su his
Plural Subject noi we vu you ili they ellas they illos they
Object nos us vos you les them las them los them
Possessive nor our vor your lor their lor their lor their

The pronoun expressing politeness is vu,[140] which is also the second person plural. The indefinite personal pronoun "one" is on.[141] If necessary, one can specify the gender of third person plural by using illos (masculine) or ellas (feminine).[140]

In the object form the pronouns are: me, te, le, la, it, nos, vos, and les (with los and las as specific masculine and feminine forms, respectively). In the oblique case, the pronouns are me, te, il (or le), noi (or nos), voi (or vos), and ili (or les), varying by user and situation for pronouns except me and te.[144] The possessive pronouns are mi, tui, su (his/her/its), nor, vor and lor.[140] They may be pluralized: li mi (mine, singular), li mis (mine, plural), li nor (ours, singular), li nores (ours, plural).

Grammatical endings are used, though to a far lesser extent than more schematic planned languages such as Esperanto and Ido in which parts of speech are marked with obligatory endings.[145] Only a few parts of speech (such as verb infinitives) in Interlingue have entirely obligatory endings, while many others either have endings the usage of which is optional and sometimes recommended.[146] Some grammatical endings are:

  • ar, er, ir: verb infinitive. far (to do), posser (be able), scrir (to write)
  • e: the general substantival (noun) ending used obligatorily to differentiate nouns from other parts or speech, for reasons of pronunciation, or optionally for euphony. Examples of obligatory -e endings: capitale (capital, noun) vs. capital (capital, adjective), contenete (content) vs, contenet (contained), sud (south, adjective) vs. sude (south as an independent noun, as in the north and the south). A final -e is recommended in words ending with -s to avoid confusion with the plural (curse, sense), -ir, -er- and -ar endings to avoid confusion with the verb infinitive (dangere, desire, papere), and other such areas where its addition aids in differentiation or pronunciation.[146] Optional -e endings: can or cane (dog), Pentecost or Pentecoste (Pentecost). The -e and other endings are often omitted for poetic or euphonic reasons.[147]
  • i: the general adjectival ending, similar to -e in usage. Examples of obligatory -i endings: pigri (lazy) and acri (sharp) to enable pronunciation, verdi (green, adjective) to distinguish from verde (green, noun). Examples of optional -i endings: etern vs. eterni (eternal), imens vs. imensi (immense).
  • a: nouns that end in e formed from an -ar verb are often written with the -a ending if one wishes to emphasize the verbal (active) aspect. A me veni un pensa (a thought occurs to me) vs. Penses e paroles (thoughts and words). The a ending also makes nouns feminine: anglese (English person), angleso (Englishman), anglesa (English woman). This does not apply to nouns that on their own indicate the gender (patre, matre).[148]
  • o: indicates the masculine gender in the same way a indicates the feminine.

Correlatives

While correlatives were not made to match a pre-determined scheme (such as the correlatives in Esperanto[149]), the majority do match the prefixes and suffixes in the chart below.

QU-

(interrogative/relative)

T-

(demonstrative)

ALQU-

(undefined)

NEQU-

(negative)

-CUNC

(indeterminate)

Ø

(collective)

-I

(persons, standard demonstrative)

qui

(who)

ti

(this/that)

alqui

(someone)

nequi

(nobody)

quicunc

(whoever)

omni

(every, all)

-O

(things)

quo

(what)

to

(that: general demonstrative

as in "that is true")

alquo

(something)

nequo

(nothing)

quocunc

(whatever)

omno

(all)

-EL

(both persons and things)

quel

(which)

tel

(such)

alquel

(any)

nequel quelcunc

(whichever)

chascun

(each, all)

-AL

(quality)

qual

(which, what a)

tal

(that)

alqual

(any kind)

nequal qualcunc
-AM

(way, mode)

quam

(as)

tam

(so)

alquam

(anyhow)

nequam quamcunc

(however)

-ANT

(quantity)

quant

(how many)

tant

(so much)

alquant

(somewhat)

nequant quantcunc
-ANDE

(time)

quande

(when)

tande

(then)

alquande nequande

(never)

quandecunc sempre

(always, ever)

-U

(place)

u

(where)

ci / ta

(here / there)

alcu

(somewhere)

necu

(nowhere)

ucunc

(anywhere)

partú

(everywhere)

Notes on the correlatives:[150]

Alcun (some) and necun (no, none) are respectively the adjectives of alquel and nequel.

The -qui series has optional accusative forms ending in -em: quem, alquem, nequem.

The -al series is adverbialized with the -men ending: qualmen (how) talmen (that way).

Correlatives can take the plural ending: queles, quales, tis, omnis, etc.

Ci (here) and ta (there) can be affixed to ti and to to indicate proximity or distance: ti libre (this book), ti-ci libre (this book here), ti-ta libre (that book there), tis (these), tis-ci (these here), tis-ta (those there), to-ci (this here), to-ta (that there).

Many derivatives are formed from the correlatives: qualitá from qual + itá, quantitá from quant + -itá, omnipotent from omni + potent.

Verbs

Verbs in Interlingue have three endings: -ar, -er, and -ir. Conjugation is performed with a combination of endings and auxiliary verbs. The verb esser (to be) is exceptional in being written es in the present tense, though the esse form is seen in the imperative.[148]

Simple Verb Tenses
Form Interlingue English Notes
Infinitive ar / er / ir amar / decider / scrir to love / to decide / to write
Present a / e / i yo ama / decide / scri I love / decide / write
Past -t yo amat / decidet / scrit I loved / decided / wrote stress thus falls on the last syllable: yo amat
Future va + inf. yo va amar / decider / scrir I will (shall) love / decide / write va on its own is not a verb (to go = ear or vader)
Conditional vell + inf. yo vell amar / decider / scrir I would love / decide / write Also used for hearsay: Un acusation secun quel il vell har esset... - An accusation alleging him to have been...

(lit. an accusation according to which he would have been...)

Imperative a! / e! / i! ama! / decide! / scri! love! / decide! / write! Imperative of esser is esse.
Compound Verb Tenses
Form Interlingue English Notes
Perfect ha + t yo ha amat / decidet / scrit I have loved / decided / written ha on its own is not a verb (to have = haver)
Pluperfect hat + t yo hat amat / decidet / scrit I had loved / decided / written
Future Perfect va har + t yo va har amat / decidet / scrit I will (shall) have loved / decided / written
Perfect Conditional vell har + t yo vell har amat / decidet / scrit I would have loved / decided / written
Future in the past vat + inf. yo vat amar / decider / scrir I was going to love / to decide / to write
Precative ples + inf. ples amar! / decider! / scrir! please love! / please / write!
Hortative lass + inf. lass nos amar! / decider! / scrir! let's love! / decide! / write!
Optative mey + inf. yo mey amar / decider / scrir May I love / decide / write Only the same as English may in the optative mood (as in "May his days be long" or "May the Force be with you", not "I may or may not go").
Present participle -nt amant / decident / scrient loving / deciding / writing -ir verbs become -ient
Gerund (adverbial participle) -nte amante / decidente / scriente (while) loving / deciding / writing -ir verbs become -iente

The present participle is used to qualify nouns: un cat ama, un amant cat (a cat loves, a loving cat) and is often seen in adjectives such as fatigant (tiring, from fatigar, to tire). The gerund is used to indicate another action or state of being going on at the same time: scriente un missage, yo videt que... (writing a message, I saw that...).

Many further combinations of endings and auxiliary verbs are possible. Some examples:

Yo vell har esset amat = I would have been loved

Hante retornat al dom... = Having returned to the house... (ha + gerund)

Other notes on verbs:

The subjunctive does not exist in Interlingue: yo vole que tu ama (I want you to love). Mey is often used to express it when necessary, however, frequently after que: Yo vole que tu mey amar (I want you to love, lit. I want that you may love).[148][151]

Hay is a standalone verb signifying there is or there are: Hay du homes in li dom (there are two people in the house). As a standalone verb there is no official infinitive but users of the language often conjugate it as if there were (hayat, etc.).[152] Other ways of expressing there is or there are: esser (esset nequó altri a far = there was nothing else to do), exister (it existe du metodes = there are two ways), trovar se (in li cité trova se tri cavalles = there are three horses in the city), etc.

The passive is formed using the verb esser: yo es amat (I am loved). Se makes the verb refer to itself (reflexive form)[140] which often functions as a shorter way to form the passive: li frontieras esset cludet = li frontieras cludet se (the borders were closed).

The progressive tense (-nt) is not used with the same frequency as in English (what are you doing? = quo tu fa?, not quo tu es fant?). It emphasizes the continuity of the verb and is often used in storytelling (noi esset marchant vers li rivere quande... = we were walking towards the river when...)

The verb star (to stand) may be used to emphasize the completion of a verb: li dom sta constructet (the house stands constructed, i.e. it is completely built).[140]

The verb ear (to go) may be used to emphasize the continuity of a verb: li dom ea constructet (the house is being built).[140]

The double negative is permitted, and was even recommended by de Wahl[153] for its internationality and precision. De Wahl gave the following phrase as an example: "Yo ha trovat li libre, quem vu ha dat me, in null loc, quem vu ha indicat me" (lit. I found the book you gave me nowhere you indicated me, thus "I didn't find the book anywhere you told me to look"). In this phrase, not permitting a double negative would result in ambiguity up to the word null (the only indication of a negative in the phrase), recommending Yo ne ha trovat li libre...in null loc. An obligatory double negative was never imposed and later Occidentalists found that they rarely used it,[154] but it remained permitted and is seen occasionally.

The infinitive may also used as a mild or impersonal imperative:[155] ne fumar - no smoking; bon comprender: un crímine es totvez un crímine - let's be clear (lit. understand well): a crime is still a crime.

Adverbs

Interlingue has primary adverbs and derived adverbs. Primary adverbs are not generated from other parts of speech and are thus not formed using any special endings: tre (very), sempre (always), etc.

Derived adverbs are formed by adding the suffix -men to an adjective (rapid = quick, rapidmen = quickly), cognate with French -ment, Italian -mente, and others. The ending -men was inspired by Provençal and spoken French (which does not pronounce the t in -ment) and chosen over -mente to avoid clashing with the noun ending -ment and other nouns in the language derived from the past tense in -t.[156][157] The ending may be omitted when the meaning is clear: tu deve far it rapid(men) = you must do it quick(ly).

It is possible to group the most common adverbs as below, but the number of adverbs is nearly limitless when all possible derived adverbs are included.

Genre Common Adverbs
Manner (How?) qualmen, quam, talmen, tam, alquam, nequam, solmen, apen, tot, totalmen, totmen, ne totmen, totmen ne
Quantity (How much?) quant, tant, sat, suficent, nequant, alquant, tre, tro, circa, mult, poc, un poc, quelcvez, multvez, sovente,

plu, adplu, sempre, sempre plu, sempre plu mult, sempre plu mult ancor, min, plu o min, maxim, admaxim

Location (Where? To / from where?) u, ci, ta, alcú, necú, partú, ucunc, supra, infra, circum, éxter, extra, intra, ínter, detra, levul, dextri, proxim, lontan.
Time (When?) quande, unquande, alquande, nequande, quandecunc, alor, tande, ínterim, nu, strax, subitmen, just, justmen, bentost, tost,

tard, temporan, solmen, ne ante, sovente, sempre, ne plu, antey, poy, depoy, desde, in ante, ja, ancor, ne ancor, adplu

Affirmation/ Negation / Doubt (Really?) yes, no, ne, ne plu, si, ya, fórsan, sin dúbite.

Derivation

An example of derivation from the magazine Cosmoglotta.
Flowchart demonstrating derivation of nouns from verbs using de Wahl's rule.

The application of de Wahl's rule to verbs and the usage of numerous suffixes and prefixes was created to resolve irregularities that had plagued creators of language projects before Occidental, who were forced to make the choice between regularity and innatural forms, or irregularity and natural forms. The prevailing view before its application was that natural forms needed to be sacrificed for the sake of regularity, while those that opted for naturalism were forced to admit numerous irregularities when doing so (Idiom Neutral for example had a list of 81 verbs with special radicals[158] used when forming derivatives), a paradox summed up by Louis Couturat in 1903 as follows:[159]

In short, one finds oneself confronted by the antinomy that the words that are international are not regular, and the words that are regular are not international; the prevailing opinion [of naturalists such as Julius Lott and Edgar de Wahl] was that regularity should be sacrificed for internationality in the formation of words.

.

The rules created by Edgar de Wahl to resolve this were first described in 1909[160] in the Discussiones of Peano's Academia pro Interlingua and are as follows:

  1. If, after the removal of -r or -er of the infinitive, the root ends in a vowel, the final -t is added. Crear (to create), crea/t-, crea/t/or, crea/t/ion, crea/t/iv, crea/t/ura.
  2. If the root ends in consonants d or r, they are changed into s: decid/er (to decide), deci/s-, deci/s/ion deci/s/iv. Adherer (to adhere), adhe/s-, adhe/s/ion
  3. In all other cases, with six exceptions, the removal of the ending gives the exact root: duct/er, duct-, duct/ion.

Once these rules were applied, Occidental was left with six exceptions. They are:

  1. ced/er, cess- (concession)
  2. sed/er, sess- (session)
  3. mov/er, mot- (motion)
  4. ten/er, tent- (temptation)
  5. vert/er, vers- (version)
  6. veni/r, vent- (advent)

Suffixes are added either to the verbal root or the present theme of the verb (the infinitive minus -r). An example of the latter is the suffix -ment: move/r, move/ment (not movetment), experi/r, experi/ment (not experitment), and -ntie (English -nce): tolera/r (tolerate), tolera/ntie, existe/r (exist), existe/ntie.

Affixes

The major prefixes and suffixes used in word derivation in Interlingue are added to either the present theme (infinitive minus -r), verbal root (infinitive minus two preceding vowels), or perfect theme (present theme + t or +s for verbs finishing with -d or -r) of verbs, as well as other types of speech. The below is a sample of some of the affixes used.

affix meaning affixed to before affix after affix notes
-abil/-ibil able verbal root posser (to be able) possibil (possible) -abil for -ar verbs, -ibil for -er and -ir verbs
-ada/-ida -ade verbal root promenar (to stroll) promenada (a walk, a promenade) -ada for -ar verbs, -ida for -er and -ir verbs
-ach- pejorative verbal root criticar (criticize) criticachar (complain, whine)
-ar general verb noun, adjective sicc (dry) siccar (to dry) General verb final in most cases for all modern verbs
-ard pejorative noun suffix verbal root furter (steal) furtard (thief)
bel- kinship by marriage noun fratre (brother) belfratre (brother-in-law)
des- cessation various infectar (infect)

avantage (advantage)

desinfectar (disinfect)

desavantage (disadvantage)

dis- separation, dispersion various membre (member)

semar (sow, seminate)

dismembrar (dismember)

dissemar (disseminate)

-er- doer of verb verbal root lavar (wash) lavere / lavera / lavero (washer) -a or -o to specify female or male gender
-ette diminutive noun dom (house) domette (cottage)
ex- ex- noun presidente (president) ex-presidente (ex-president)
ho- this noun semane (week) ho-semane (this week)
-illio caressive noun fratre (brother) fratrillio (bro) affixed to male nouns
ín- in-, un-, etc. adjective credibil (believable) íncredibil (unbelievable)
-innia caressive noun matre (mother) matrinnia (mom/mommy) affixed to female nouns
-ion -ion perfect theme crear (create) creation (creation)
-iv -ive perfect theme exploder (explode) explosiv (explosive) perfect theme: explod-er → explod → explos
-ment -ment present theme experir (to experience) experiment (experiment)
mi- half noun fratre (brother) mifratre (half-brother)
mis- false (mis-) various comprender (understand) miscomprender (misunderstand)
non- non- noun fumator (smoker) nonfumator (non-smoker)
-ntie -nce present theme tolerar (tolerate)

experir (to experience)

tolerantie (tolerance)

experientie (experience)

-ir verbs add an e: ir → ientie
-or -er, -or perfect theme distribuer (distribute) distributor (distributor)
-ori -ory perfect theme currer (run) cursori (cursory) perfect theme: curr-er → curr → curs
per- through, all the way verb forar (pierce) perforar (perforate)
pre- before various historie (history) prehistorie (prehistory)
pro- to the front verb ducter (lead) producter (produce)
re- re- verb venir (come) revenir (return)
step- step- noun matre (mother) stepmatre (stepmother)
-ura -ure perfect theme scrir (write) scritura (scripture)


Ease of learning

As an international auxiliary language, ease of learning through regular derivation and recognizable vocabulary was a key principle in Occidental's creation. The magazine Cosmoglotta often featured letters from new users and former users of other international languages (primarily Esperanto and Ido) attesting to the language's simplicity:[161] letters from new users to demonstrate their quick command of the language,[162][163][164] and attestations from experienced auxiliary language users to share their experiences. Because many users of the language had encountered it after first learning Esperanto, data on learnability of the language for those without experience in other international auxiliary languages is difficult to find. However, one experiment to ascertain learning time was carried out in the years 1956 to 1957 in a Swiss Catholic high school (gymnasium) in Disentis on the time required to learn the language. The experiment showed that the students participating in the study, who had previous experience with French, Latin, and Greek, mastered both written and spoken Interlingue after 30 hours of study.[165]

Literature

The main literary texts in Occidental appeared in Cosmoglotta. There were also some works, both original and translated, published in Interlingue. Other texts appeared in the magazine Helvetia but these were less common. Micri chrestomathie[166] is an example of a translated work, featuring a compilation of texts by Jaroslav Podobský, H. Pášma and Jan Kajš published in 1933.

Some original texts published as separated books are:

  • Krasina, raconta del subterrania del Moravian carst,[167] published in 1938 by Jan Amos Kajš.
  • Li astres del Verne,[168] a collection of original poetry by Jaroslav Podobský, published both in 1935 and 1947.

Example texts

Template:Quotation

Possible pronunciation: Template:IPA-art

Translation: "Material civilization, science, and even art unify themselves more and more. The educated European feels himself almost at home in all lands that have European civilization, that is, more and more, in the entire world. Today almost all states war with the same armaments. Without pause the modes of intercommunication improve, and in consequence from that the world seems to decrease. A Parisian is now closer to an Englishman or a German than he was a hundred years before to a French peasant."

Lord's Prayer
Interlingue/Occidental Interlingua Latin (traditional) English (traditional)

Patre nor, qui es in li cieles,
mey tui nómine esser sanctificat,
mey tui regnia venir,
mey tui vole esser fat,
qualmen in li cieles talmen anc sur li terre.
Da nos hodie nor pan omnidial,
e pardona nor débites,
qualmen anc noi pardona nor debitores.
E ne inducte nos in tentation,
ma libera nos de lu mal.
Amen.

Patre nostre, qui es in le celos,
que tu nomine sia sanctificate;
que tu regno veni;
que tu voluntate sia facite
como in le celo, etiam super le terra.
Da nos hodie nostre pan quotidian,
e pardona a nos nostre debitas
como etiam nos los pardona a nostre debitores.
E non induce nos in tentation,
sed libera nos del mal.
Amen.

Pater noster, qui es in cælis,
sanctificetur nomen tuum.
Adveniat regnum tuum.
Fiat voluntas tua,
sicut in cælo, et in terra.
Panem nostrum quotidianum da nobis hodie,
et dimitte nobis debita nostra,
sicut et nos dimittimus debitoribus nostris.
Et ne nos inducas in tentationem,
sed libera nos a malo.
Amen.

Our father, who art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name;
thy kingdom come,
thy will be done.
on earth, as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread;
and forgive us our debts
as we have forgiven our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil.
Amen.

1942 New Year's greeting printed in Cosmoglotta B (Switzerland)[169]
Occidental English
Si noi vell viver ancor in li felici témpor quel precedet li guerre universal, tande anc li present articul vell reflecter li serenitá per quel noi acustomat salutar li comensa de un nov annu. Ma hodie, li pie desir quel noi ordinarimen expresse per un cordial 'Felici nov annu' ha transformat se in sanguant ironie. Noi plu ne posse pronunciar ti paroles sin sentir lor terribil banalitá e absolut vacuitá de sens. Li future es obscurissim e it promesse nos plu mult sufrenties quam radies de espera. Li pace va sequer li guerre quam li die seque li nocte e quam li calma succede al tempeste. Un nov munde va nascer ex li caos e in ti nov munde anc noi interlinguistes va ti-ci vez luder un rol decisiv. Were we to still be living in the happy time that preceded the world war, then this article would also reflect the serenity by which we used to greet the beginning of a new year. But today, the pious desire that we ordinarily express with a cordial 'Happy new year' has been transformed into bloody irony. We can no longer pronounce these words without feeling their terrible banality and absolute lack of meaning. The future is beyond dark and it promises us more suffering than rays of hope. Peace will follow war, just as the day follows the night and the calm comes after the storm. A new world will be born out of the chaos, and in this new world this time we interlinguists will also play a decisive role.

See also

References

  1. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 90: Translation: "Occidental being a neo-Latin language, the influence of the languages French, Italian and Spanish will probably still be greater than that of the Anglo-Saxons."
  2. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1944, p. 104: Translation: "and what else is Occidental than a simplified Italian, or, to state it more generally, the simplified commonality of all Romance languages?"
  3. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1944, p. 116: Translation: "Latin is dead, even though it is still used for a few limited purposes. But the mother language Latin still lives in her daughters, the Romance languages - and Occidental is one of them."
  4. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1935, p. 2
  5. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1948, p. 100". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&page=101&size=45.
  6. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1948, p. 98". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&page=99&size=45.
  7. ^ Barandovská-Frank, Vĕra. "Latinidaj planlingvoj (AIS-kurso, 1 studunuo)". http://interl.home.amu.edu.pl/interlingvistiko/Barandovska_Latinidaj_planlingvoj.pdf. ""Post la okupo de Tallinn per sovetia armeo estis deportita kaj malaperinta la edzino de De Wahl, lia domo komplete forbruliĝis dum bombardado, detruiĝis lia riĉa biblioteko kaj manuskriptoj. Post la alveno de naziaj trupoj De Wahl rifuzis translokiĝon al Germanio kaj estis enkarcerigita. Por savi lin, liaj amikoj lasis proklami lin mense malsana. En la jaro 1944, 77-jaraĝa, li eniris sanatorion Seewald apud Tallinn kaj restis tie ankaŭ post la milito, ne havante propran loĝejon""
  8. ^ "Occidental A, 1948, p. 98". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&page=99&size=45.
  9. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1948, p. 7". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1948&page=7&size=45. ""Li recent evenimentes politic e li division del munde in du sectores de influentie (occidental e oriental) ha mettet nor propagatores de quelc landes in delicat situation. It ha devenit desfacil nu parlar pri un lingue de quel li nómine in cert landes evoca suspectiones in li circul politic. Pro to nor Centrale ha recivet ti-ci mensus, precipue de Tchecoslovacia, propositiones usar vice li nómine de Occidental ti de Interal (=INTER/national Auxiliari lingue).""
  10. ^ Barandovská-Frank, Vĕra. "Latinidaj planlingvoj (AIS-kurso, 1 studunuo)". http://interl.home.amu.edu.pl/interlingvistiko/Barandovska_Latinidaj_planlingvoj.pdf. ""La postmilita divido de Eŭropo en orientan kaj okcidentan sektoron sentigis la nomon “Occidental” propagando por kapitalisma okcidento, tial venis proponoj ŝanĝi la nomon.""
  11. ^ Template:Cite book
  12. ^ Barandovská-Frank, Vĕra. "Latinidaj planlingvoj (AIS-kurso, 1 studunuo)". http://interl.home.amu.edu.pl/interlingvistiko/Barandovska_Latinidaj_planlingvoj.pdf. ""...la simileco inter ambaŭ interlingvoj estas tiom granda, ke certe eblos iu racia sintezo inter ili, konkludis Matejka en 1951...La senato de Interlingue-Union kaj la Interlingue-Academie pritraktis la proponojn, ke (1) Interlingue Union iĝu kolektiva membro de IALA kaj (2) Interlingue-Union restu favora al estonta aktiveco de IALA kaj morale subtenu ĝin. La unua propono ne estis akceptita, sed jes la dua, do praktike kunlaboro kaj subteno de Interlingua.""
  13. ^ "Cosmoglotta, summer 2000". http://cosmoglotta.narod.ru/Cg289/cg289.htm. "Proque yo esperat que noi vell posser un vez fusionar con Interlingua, ti-ci nov nómine devet facilisar li transition por nor membres, evitante talmen, coram li publica, un nov radical changeament de nómine. Yo dunc proposit, in februar 1948, in Cosmoglotta, remplazzar li nómine Occidental per Interlingue malgré li oposition del presidente del Academie."
  14. ^ a b Template:Google books
  15. ^ Template:Google books
  16. ^ Omniglot: Interlingue (Occidental)
  17. ^ Barandovská-Frank, Vĕra. "Latinidaj planlingvoj (AIS-kurso, 1 studunuo)". http://interl.home.amu.edu.pl/interlingvistiko/Barandovska_Latinidaj_planlingvoj.pdf.
  18. ^ a b c d Harlow, Don. The Esperanto Book, Chapter 3: Template:Webarchive.
  19. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1927, p. 33". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1927&page=39&size=45.
  20. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1927, p. 64". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1929&page=68&size=45. "Yo confesse que yo vide poc in li Europan cultura del ultim 1900 annus quel es tam remarcabilmen preciosi. To quo es max visibil es tyrannie, oppression, guerres e nigri superstition."
  21. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1949, p.108". http://cosmoglotta.pbworks.com/w/page/131845221/Cosmoglotta%20A%20149%20%28oct%201949%29. "In ti témpor yo esset in Sydney, e pro que yo havet grand interesse por li indigenes e volet converter mi blanc fratres a un bon opinion pri ili, yo scrit in li presse pri ti heroic action e comparat li brutalitá del blanc rasse con li conciliantie e self-sacrificie del negros."
  22. ^ a b c "Kosmoglott, 1924, p. 2". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1924&page=2&size=45. "Tal paroles nu ancor ne tro numerosi, ja in li secul passat ha augmentat in grand quantitá, e in futur va crescer in exorbitant proportion, quande, per li international comunication, li idées del stabil oriental cultures va inundar e influer li maladi Europa, quel just nu perdi su equilibrie."
  23. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1937". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1937&size=45&page=114. "JAPAN: Kokusaigo-Kenkyusho, Daita 11-784, Setagaya, TOKIO (Pch. Tokio 62 061)"
  24. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1958, p. 66, 77". https://github.com/occidental-lang/occidental-lang.github.io/blob/master/resources/Cosmoglotta_V_1958.pdf.
  25. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 8". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1945&size=45&page=8.
  26. ^ a b "Occidental A, 1946, p. 24". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1946&size=45&page=25.
  27. ^ "Kosmoglott, 1925, p.40". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1925&page=40&size=45. "Translation: "I found the most precise sense of "-atu" for example no earlier than 1924...maybe with time I will also find the precise sense of "-il, -esc, -itudo", etc.""
  28. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1947, p. 15". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1947&page=15&size=45.
  29. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1946, p. 27". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1946&size=45&page=27.
  30. ^ "Kosmoglott 001, 1922, p. 4". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1922&page=4&size=45.
  31. ^ "Transcendental Algebra". http://keyboardfire.com/s/transalg/.
  32. ^ "Kosmoglott, 1925, p.7". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1927&size=45&page=7.
  33. ^ "Kosmoglott, 1924, p. 14". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1924&size=45&teil=0101&page=14. "Translation: "He asserts that Occidental, despite being easily readable, is very difficult to write and that one could hardly find 10 people in the world able to write it without errors. Well, with me alone there is already three times that number corresponding in good Occidental.""
  34. ^ [1.pdf ""Kosmoglot" – la unua interlingvistika societo en Ruslando"]. http://jki.amu.edu.pl/files/JKI%20-%2014%20-%2009%20-%20Kuznecov[1].pdf.
  35. ^ Template:Cite book
  36. ^ "Kosmoglott, 1924, p. 1". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1924&page=1&size=45.
  37. ^ "Cosmoglotta, 1927, p. 1". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1927&page=7&size=45.
  38. ^ a b "Cosmoglotta A, 1947, p. 17". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1947&size=45&page=17.
  39. ^ "Helvetia, January 1930". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e1e&datum=1930&page=9&size=45. ""...Occ. esset unesimli propagat per Germanes, Austrianes, Svedes, Tchecoslovacos e solmen ante du annus ha penetrat in Francia.""
  40. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1937, p.79". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1937&page=80&size=45.
  41. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1933, p. 20.". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1933&size=45&page=22.
  42. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1935, p. 30". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1935&size=45&page=30.
  43. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1931, p. 92". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1931&size=45&page=95. "Un commercial firma in Tchecoslovacia scri spontanmen al redaction: "Mi firma...opera in Italia solmen per li medium de Occidental, e to in omni romanic states. To es un miraculos fact. Vu posse scrir a omni romano in Occidental e il va comprender vor idées.""
  44. ^ ie:Liste de documentes del Sviss Association por Occidental
  45. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1934, p. 52". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1934&page=52&size=45.
  46. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1934, p. 52.". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1934&size=45&page=67.
  47. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1935, p. 12". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1935&size=45&page=12.
  48. ^ "Cosmoglotta B (Cosmoglotta-Informationes), 1935, p. 1". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1935&page=1&size=45.
  49. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1936, p. 17". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1936&size=45&page=17.
  50. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1936, p. 38". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1936&size=45&page=38.
  51. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1948, pg. 5". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&size=45&page=5. "(Translation) Regrettably, public propagation of Occidental was not possible in Germany from 1935 (the year when artificial languages were banned in Germany) until the end of the war..."
  52. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 12. Translation öf the last pre-war Occidental postcard from Austria sent to Switzerland in December 1938: "My sadness from not being able to continue my interlinguistic work continues and has made me almost melancholic. Please do not send me mail in Occidental."
  53. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1944, p. 109. Translation: "The reality is that Occidental, like the other international languages, is prohibited in Germany, that the Occidental societies have been disbanded there (also in Czechoslovakia and Austria) even before the war, and that only regime change in those countries will make Occidental propagation a possibility again.
  54. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1948, p. 122". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&size=45&page=122. "English translation: The final exchange of telegrams between us was your telegram in March 1938 where you asked me if I would go to The Hague to participate in the IALA conference, and my quick negative response, not followed by a letter explaining why. You certainly had guessed the cause, but you cannot know what actually happened. Immediately after the coming of Hitler I had the "honour", as president of an international organisation, to be watched by the Gestapo, which interrogated me multiple times and searched through my house, confiscating a large part of my correspondence and my interlinguistic material.""
  55. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1948, p. 33.". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1948&size=45&page=33. "Translation: "I myself lost my entire rich Occidental-Interlingue possessions in 1936 through home raids by the infamous Gestapo...How thankful you must be to your governments which have avoided such catastrophes that our land (Germany) has suffered, one after another, for 35 years now.""
  56. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1946, p. 32". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1946&size=45&page=32.
  57. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1946, p. 11". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1946&page=11&size=45.
  58. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1947, p. 107". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1947&size=45&page=99.
  59. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1947, p. 100". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1947&size=45&page=92.
  60. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1948, p. 99". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&page=100&size=45.
  61. ^ Barandovská-Frank, Vĕra. "Latinidaj planlingvoj (AIS-kurso, 1 studunuo)". http://interl.home.amu.edu.pl/interlingvistiko/Barandovska_Latinidaj_planlingvoj.pdf. ""Post la okupo de Tallinn per sovetia armeo estis deportita kaj malaperinta la edzino de De Wahl, lia domo komplete forbruliĝis dum bombardado, detruiĝis lia riĉa biblioteko kaj manuskriptoj. Post la alveno de naziaj trupoj De Wahl rifuzis translokiĝon al Germanio kaj estis enkarcerigita. Por savi lin, liaj amikoj lasis proklami lin mense malsana. En la jaro 1944, 77-jaraĝa, li eniris sanatorion Seewald apud Tallinn kaj restis tie ankaŭ post la milito, ne havante propran loĝejon""
  62. ^ a b c d "Plan de aparition de KOSMOGLOTT 1922-1926 e COSMOGLOTTA 1927-1972 (Austrian National Library)". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1922&page=73&size=45.
  63. ^ "Kosmoglott, 1922, p. 65". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1922&page=65&size=45.
  64. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1927, p. 95". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1927&page=103&size=45.
  65. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 3: Translation: "For some hundreds of international words there are two forms between which it is not easy to know which one is better. E. de Wahl wisely wrote both in the first dictionaries, with the intention to let practice make the decision."
  66. ^ Template:Cite book
  67. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1944, p. 66
  68. ^ Template:Cite book
  69. ^ "Kosmoglott, 1926, p. 52". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1926&page=52&size=45.
  70. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1938, p. 82". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1938&size=45&page=71.
  71. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1943, p. 85: English translation: "Because the president and secretary of the Academy are located in countries in a state of war, the leading Occidentalists of the neutral countries, Switzerland and Sweden, believe it necessary to set up an INTERIM ACADEMY which will function until the other will be able to resume its work. The decisions of this interim academy will be conditional, i.e.: must be validated by the regular Academy after the war, and due to that it will deliver to it all documents justifying its decisions, with detailed reasons."
  72. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1938, p. 82". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1938&size=45&page=71.
  73. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1939, p. 1". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1939&page=1&size=45.
  74. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 49
  75. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1944, p. 67: "...li standardisation del lingue have su natural límites. "Standardisar li lingue ne significa arbitrarimen oficialisar un del solutiones possibil e rejecter li altris quam índesirabil e genant. On standardisa solmen solutiones queles ja ha esset sanctionat per li practica."
  76. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1946, p.8.". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1946&page=8&size=45. "English translation: "At the assembly of the Swiss Association for Occidental in Bienne it was noted with satisfaction that despite the war the cooperation at least with the Swedish worldlanguage friends was always able to be maintained, in that the letters and telegrams written in Occidental passed by the censors without problem.""
  77. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1943, p. 6
  78. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 15
  79. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1946, p.9". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1946&page=9&size=45.
  80. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 119.". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1945&page=119&size=45. "English translation: "When I arrived in Prague after my escape from the concentration of Leitmeritz, I had literally nothing except a ragged prison uniform, the so-called "pyjama" of the prison camps...Soon after I arrived in Prague I published an ad to search friends of the international language...""
  81. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 83.". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1945&page=83&size=45. "English translation: "The letters from France are starting to arrive in Switzerland. Especially appreciated are those from Mr. Lerond, a teacher in Bréville tra Donville (Manche) and from Mr. René Chabaud, who happily returned safe and sound from a prison camp in Germany.""
  82. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 24
  83. ^ Template:Cite book
  84. ^ a b "Cosmoglotta A, 1948, p. 84". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&page=84&size=45.
  85. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1937, p. 1". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1937&page=2&size=45.
  86. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1948, p. 85". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&page=85&size=45.
  87. ^ a b "Cosmoglotta A, 1948, p. 84". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&page=85&size=45.
  88. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1948, p. 34". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&size=45&page=35.
  89. ^ a b "Cosmoglotta B, 1948, p. 29". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1948&page=29&size=45.
  90. ^ Barandovská-Frank, Vĕra. "Latinidaj planlingvoj (AIS-kurso, 1 studunuo)". http://interl.home.amu.edu.pl/interlingvistiko/Barandovska_Latinidaj_planlingvoj.pdf. "Alphonse Matejka konstatis, ke la publikigita vortprovizo de Interlingua en 90% kongruas kun tiu de Interlingue, se oni ne rigardas ortografion (historian kaj simpligitan) kaj uzon de finaj vokaloj."
  91. ^ Gode, Alexander. "A grammar of Interlingua: Appendix 1 (Double-Stem Verbs)". https://adoneilson.com/int/gi/append/double.html.
  92. ^ "Le tres principios principal del standardization international in interlingua". https://www.interlingua.com/historia/publicationes/standardisation.htm.
  93. ^ "Interlingua-English Dictionary S". http://www.bowks.net/worldlang/aux/b_IED_s.html.
  94. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 120". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1945&page=119&size=45.
  95. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1946, p. 4". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1946&page=4&size=45.
  96. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1948, p. 12". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1948&size=45&page=12. "Translation: "Unfortunately, in 1947 we were not able to publish more than two printed editions: the enormous increase of printing costs and the difficulties transferring the credits accumulated in certain countries were the reasons why we had to be prudent about expenses...even though printing costs have increased by 5 times compared to before the war, the subscription fees have remained the same. Regretfully we have been forced to increase the subscription price this year to 8 Swiss francs...""
  97. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1948, p. 99". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&page=100&size=45. "Translation: "One should not forget that the name Occidental had been selected in 1922, when it had absolutely no political significance. And today, by strange chance the title of the Occidental-Union coincides with that of a political league opposed to the Russians. It is possible that in Tallinn they considered de Wahl a person requiring police surveillance. How to protest and explain the misunderstanding from so far away?""
  98. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1948, p. 7". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1948&page=7&size=45.
  99. ^ "Biographias: Ric(hard) Berger". https://www.interlingua.com/historia/biographias/berger.htm. "Postea, de 1934 a 1950, ille esseva co-redactor del magazin del Occidental-Union, "Cosmoglotta", e esseva le interprenditor in 1948 quando occidental - presentate per le estoniano Edgar de Wahl - cambiava nomine a interlingue."
  100. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1949, p. 112". https://www.scribd.com/doc/48608370/Cosmoglotta-October-1949. "English translation: "91% of the voters have adopted the proposition of the Senate of the Occidental Union, i.e. the new name: INTERLINGUE. The usage of the name INTERLINGUE, or if one wishes INTERLINGUE (Occ.) is valid from 1.9.1949.""
  101. ^ a b c Barandovská-Frank, Vĕra. "Latinidaj planlingvoj (AIS-kurso, 1 studunuo)". p. 18. http://interl.home.amu.edu.pl/interlingvistiko/Barandovska_Latinidaj_planlingvoj.pdf.
  102. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, Summer 2000". http://cosmoglotta.narod.ru/Cg289/cg289.htm.
  103. ^ Template:Citation
  104. ^ "IE-Munde - Jurnal e information pri Interlingue (Occidental)". https://www.ie-munde.com/historie.html.
  105. ^ Template:Cite journal
  106. ^ "IE-Munde - Jurnal e information pri Interlingue (Occidental)". https://www.ie-munde.com/incontra-de-interlingue-7-im-de-april-2014-in-muenchen.html.
  107. ^ Template:Cite journal
  108. ^ a b "Cosmoglotta A, 1946, p. 18". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1946&page=18&size=45.
  109. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1927, p. 56". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1927&page=62&size=45.
  110. ^ Template:Citation
  111. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1946, p. 19". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1946&page=19&size=45.
  112. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1946, p. 18". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1946&page=19&size=45.
  113. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1946, p. 19". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1946&page=20&size=45.
  114. ^ "Kosmoglott, 1923, p. 9". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1923&page=9&size=45. "Translation: "But I do not understand why the word "celibatario" does not fit Ido. If you have the root "celibat" you derive words such as "legatario, millionario" etc. in the same way. Someone who like M. de B[eaufront] does not understand the sense of the suffix in "secundari" may learn the word as a whole, as it is done in Ido, but I think it is better to have a perhaps somewhat fluctuating suffix than to learn 100 new root words, where I never know if the inventors in one case have preferred an international word or in another a "logical" new formation that I could never even imagine.""
  115. ^ Barandovská-Frank, Vĕra. "Latinidaj planlingvoj (AIS-kurso, 1 studunuo)". http://interl.home.amu.edu.pl/interlingvistiko/Barandovska_Latinidaj_planlingvoj.pdf. "Male al la “Regul De Wahl”, kiu ebligas en Interlingue regulajn derivaĵojn, Interlingua konservas plurajn radikojn, ekz. ag/act (agente/actor), frang/fract (frangibil/fraction), ung/unct (unguento/unction), tiel ke sen lingvistikaj antaŭscioj pri infinitiva kaj supina formoj oni ne povas diveni la ĝustan rezulton."
  116. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1946, p. 22". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1946&page=23&size=45.
  117. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1937, p. 73". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1937&page=74&size=45.
  118. ^ Template:Cite book
  119. ^ a b "Kosmoglott, 1922, p. 19". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1922&size=45&page=19.
  120. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1941, p. 15". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1941&size=45&page=15.
  121. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1927, p. 86". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1927&size=45&page=94.
  122. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1927, p.95". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1927&size=45&page=103.
  123. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1927, p. 19". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1927&size=45&page=25.
  124. ^ "Helvetia, August 1929". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e1e&datum=1929&page=83&size=45.
  125. ^ "Helvetia, August 1929". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e1e&datum=1929&page=99&size=45.
  126. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 7". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1945&page=8&size=45.
  127. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 32". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1945&size=45&page=33.
  128. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1945, p. 38". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1945&size=45&page=38.
  129. ^ "ÖNB-ANNO - Cosmoglotta (Serie B)". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1947&size=45&page=90.
  130. ^ Mulaik, Stanley, Ph.D.. "Standardization of Grammatical Particles". https://rudhar.com/lingtics/intrlnga/StanleyMulaik/Prototypes%20of%20Particles%20Interlingua.pdf.
  131. ^ Matejka, Alphonse. "Autonomie e Regularitá in li Lingue International". https://occidental-lang.com/resources/Autonomie_e_Regularita_in_li_Lingue_International.pdf. "We do not hesitate to form words like “ludette, plorada, substantival, plumallia, tassade, sucrage, glotton, stridore, hesitatori, successosi, flexura” etc. etc. without asking ourselves whether these words are international or not. Even when they are in fact not international, they nevertheless never have the artificial appearance that characterizes most of the derived words in Esperanto and Ido. They always represent forms that living languages would have been able to produce using their own means."
  132. ^ Cosmoglotta April 1950, p. 5
  133. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1949, p. 38". https://www.scribd.com/document/48607233/Cosmoglotta-April-1949.
  134. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1950, p. 38". https://www.scribd.com/document/48621983/Cosmoglotta-April-1950.
  135. ^ Cosmoglotta October 1950, p. 1
  136. ^ de Wahl, Edgar (February 1929). "International o Romanic (Cosmoglotta A, 1929, pp. 27 - 33)". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1929&page=31&size=45. ""Lasciate ogni nazionalismo, voi ch’entrate" in li sant dominia del interhoman comprension."
  137. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1936, p. 12". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1936&page=12&size=45.
  138. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1935, p.3". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1935&page=3&size=45.
  139. ^ a b "Cosmoglotta B 1936, p. 11". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1936&size=45&page=11.
  140. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Grammatica de Interlingue in English, F. Haas 1956. Read 31 October 2013.
  141. ^ a b c d The Basis of International language. Read 1 November 2013.
  142. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1929, p. 165". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1929&page=169&size=45.
  143. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1927, p. 96". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1927&page=104&size=45.
  144. ^ Cosmoglotta B, 1947, p. 45
  145. ^ "The Sixteen Rules of Esperanto Grammar". http://literaturo.org/HARLOW-Don/Esperanto/rules.html#nouns. "NOUNS have the ending -o. To form the plural, add the ending -j...ADJECTIVES end in -a."
  146. ^ a b "Cosmoglotta B, 1947, p. 27". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1947&page=25&size=45.
  147. ^ Poem in Cosmoglotta 289 (summer 2000) with unwritten endings in parenthesis: Quo es li vive? On mori lent, li fin silent...Un promenad(a) in verdi parc(o). Nu flores resta sur li sarc(o)...Quo es li vive? Un rubi ros(e), mysterios(i), quel lentmen perdi su color(e). Quo resta? Solmen li dolor(e)...Quo es li vive? Tristess(e)? Chagrin(e)? Li mort(e) - - e fin(e)? Partú triumfa li amor(e), quam ombre fugi li dolor(e)! Quo es li vive? Tam bell, tam brev(i)... Un dulci rev(e) - Un gay canzon quam sol(e) aurin. Yo va amar it til li fin(e)!!
  148. ^ a b c "Grammatica de Interlingue in Interlingue". http://www.panix.com/~bartlett/Haas.html.
  149. ^ "Wikibooks: Esperanto/Appendix/Table of correlatives". https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Esperanto/Appendix/Table_of_correlatives&oldid=3241754.
  150. ^ "Occidental Course in 10 Lessons". https://occidental-lang.com/resources/OccidentalCourseIn10Lessons-EnglishTranslation.pdf.
  151. ^ "Cosmoglotta, 1939, p. 55". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1939&page=55&size=45. ""Johan comandat Petro que il mey ducter a il su cavall""
  152. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1946, p. 85". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1946&size=45&page=81.
  153. ^ "Kosmoglott, 1923, p. 23". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1923&size=45&page=23.
  154. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1941, p. 26". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1941&page=26.
  155. ^ "Cosmoglotta A 1939, p. 40". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1939&page=40&size=45.
  156. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1950, p. 2". https://www.scribd.com/document/48609059/Cosmoglotta-January-1950.
  157. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1948, p. 116". https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1948&page=117&size=45.
  158. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1948, p. 45". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1948&size=45&page=45.
  159. ^ Template:Cite book
  160. ^ "Abstracti Verbal-Substantives – Edgar de Wahl (Discussiones de Academia pro Interlingua, Nov. 1909: 21-5)". https://sites.google.com/site/latinosineflexio/-1909-13-discussiones-api#1909:21.
  161. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1937, p. 23". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1937&page=23&size=45.
  162. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1938, p. 80". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1938&size=45&page=69.
  163. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1936, p.38". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1936&page=38&size=45.
  164. ^ "Cosmoglotta A, 1927, p.107". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0g&datum=1927&size=58&page=115.
  165. ^ Barandovská-Frank, Vĕra. "Latinidaj planlingvoj (AIS-kurso, 1 studunuo)". http://interl.home.amu.edu.pl/interlingvistiko/Barandovska_Latinidaj_planlingvoj.pdf. "En svisa katolika gimnazio en Disentis (Grizono) okazis en la jaroj 1956-1957 eksperimento pri lerntempo-longeco bezonata por Interlingue. La lernantoj, kiuj havis antaŭkonojn de la lingvoj franca, latina kaj greka, regis Interlingue skribe kaj parole post 30 instruhoroj."
  166. ^ Template:Cite book
  167. ^ Template:Cite book
  168. ^ Template:Cite book
  169. ^ "Cosmoglotta B, 1942 p. 1". http://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno-plus?aid=e0m&datum=1942&page=1&size=45.

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