Gender Neutrality...
od Kalantir, 15. októbra 2011
Príspevky: 162
Jazyk: English
robinast (Zobraziť profil) 28. decembra 2011 21:48:52
@Evildela, erinja, EldanarLambetur:
The same's here!
The only thing that bothers me about the special Esperanto characters, is that when I have to use English and Esperanto by turns (ie writing in Eo and using the En-Eo dictionary simultaneously), I have to switch the keyboard layouts again and again... But there's no bad things without the good ones - it's an additional stimulus to obtain fluency in Esperanto more quickly.
Well, and if to think about - it's not even because the Eo special characters, it's because the English 'w' and 'y'...
The same's here!
The only thing that bothers me about the special Esperanto characters, is that when I have to use English and Esperanto by turns (ie writing in Eo and using the En-Eo dictionary simultaneously), I have to switch the keyboard layouts again and again... But there's no bad things without the good ones - it's an additional stimulus to obtain fluency in Esperanto more quickly.
![rideto.gif](/images/smileys/rideto.gif)
Well, and if to think about - it's not even because the Eo special characters, it's because the English 'w' and 'y'...
![senkulpa.gif](/images/smileys/senkulpa.gif)
hebda999 (Zobraziť profil) 31. decembra 2011 22:35:48
Evildela:I could not imagine Esperanto without all the j's ... it just wouldn't be Esperanto, the j's make it look so uniquePolish language uses most of the letters just like Esperanto does, so a Pole has no difficulty to read or write Esperanto correctly. And for us, Poles, y looks ugly in "yuna, domoy... = juna, domoj - is much better"