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Questions about Esperanto

de benjordan, 22 de febrer de 2012

Missatges: 37

Llengua: English

sudanglo (Mostra el perfil) 22 de febrer de 2012 10.00.15

I've been trying to think of a context in which you would say Í have a shoe', and I am stumped.

Eĉ homo kun ligna kruro bezonus paron da ŝuoj.

hebda999 (Mostra el perfil) 22 de febrer de 2012 10.24.33

sudanglo:I've been trying to think of a context in which you would say Í have a shoe', and I am stumped.

Eĉ homo kun ligna kruro bezonus paron da ŝuoj.
But it's easy:

- what do you have out there?
- I have a shoe, why do you ask?
- ...

Fenris_kcf (Mostra el perfil) 22 de febrer de 2012 10.46.01

benjordan:Why Unukornulo?

He picked apart the word, and wonders why do you use "ul" instead of "cxevalo."
Indeed. It sounds also strange to me. Can't think of any other case where the suffix "-ulo" is used for an animal (even if it is just imaginary).

sudanglo (Mostra el perfil) 22 de febrer de 2012 10.52.08

Look up the Esperanto translation of 'rodent'- nagetier in German - you will find ronĝ-ulo

tommjames (Mostra el perfil) 22 de febrer de 2012 10.53.31

Actually -UL is sometimes (though rarely) used for certain animals, as well as some inanimate objects. PMEG has examples.

I would say "unikorno" myself though, for a unicorn.

hebda999 (Mostra el perfil) 22 de febrer de 2012 12.46.33

animals -ulo:
abelmanĝulo
akarulo
amebulo
araneulo
arbogrimulo
birdbekulo
blugorĝulo
bluvostulo
brakpiedulo
brankulo
dentoskrapulo
dikhaŭtulo
muŝkaptulo
... and many, many more...

darkweasel (Mostra el perfil) 22 de febrer de 2012 14.00.13

Mamulo (a mammal) is probably the most common animal word with -ul.

benjordan (Mostra el perfil) 23 de febrer de 2012 6.07.41

What's the Esperanto word for a mane? It doesn't appear to be in the Lernu dictionary.

hebda999 (Mostra el perfil) 23 de febrer de 2012 7.13.46

mane = kolhararo (hair on horse neck)
mane = forĝista martelo (a tool)

Zafur (Mostra el perfil) 23 de febrer de 2012 18.24.19

Hmm I'm stumped between unikorno and unikornulo... The first sounds less like an animal but it's what it is literally called. Also, while we're on the topic of unicorns and cxevalo... They aren't horses. They're not horses with a horn glued on either... They have different tails (lion), different hooves (goat), a beard (goat))... It's saddening what a modern unicorn is. Nothing like a mythical creature. It'd be like putting wings on a komodo and claiming it's a faithful representation of a classic dragon. Where's the horns, fire and huge size and treasures? The same place the unicorn's features went...

Anyways, I find it interesting that ul is used with it... I've never noticed how it tends to be associated with people.

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