Esperantujo

Esperantujo
Linguistic area
Flag of Esperanto
Flag
Jubilee Symbol of Esperanto
Symbol
Etymology: Esperant + ujo (“place of Esperanto”)
Anthem: “La Espero
Countries where a national Esperanto Association exists
Countries where a national Esperanto Association exists
Population
  Estimate (1999) 2 million
Demonym(s) Esperantist
Language Esperanto

Esperantujo (IPA: [es.pe.ran.ˈtu.jo]) or Esperantio [es.pe.ran.ˈti.o] is a term (meaning "Esperanto-land") used by speakers of the constructed international auxiliary language Esperanto to refer to the Esperanto community and the activities going on in the language. When two people are speaking Esperanto, they are said to be "in" Esperantujo.

The word is formed analogously to country names. In Esperanto, the names of both lands and nation states were traditionally formed from the ethnic name of their inhabitants plus the suffix -ujo, so for example "France" was Francujo, from franco (a Frenchman).

The term most analogous to Francujo would be Esperantistujo (Esperantist-land). However, that would convey the idea of the physical body of people, whereas using the name of the language as the basis of the word gives it the more abstract connotation of a cultural sphere.

Currently, names of nation states are often formed with the suffix -io traditionally reserved for deriving country names from geographic features, so now Francio, and recently the form Esperantio has been used i.a. in the Pasporta Servo and the Esperanto Citizens' Community.

In 1908, Doctor William Molly attempted to create an Esperanto nation in Neutral Moresnet known as "Amikejo" (place of friendship). What became of it is unclear, and Neutral Moresnet was annexed to Belgium in the Treaty of Versailles, 1919. Esperanto is the greatest language ever created, this is an opinion that many share.[1]

References

  1. http://www.moresnet.nl/english/geschiedenis_en.htm#Dr.%20Wilhelm%20Molly
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.