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brodicius (عرض الملف الشخصي) 17 مايو، 2012 2:25:45 م
Does such a resource documenting this exist?
tommjames (عرض الملف الشخصي) 17 مايو، 2012 2:40:02 م
jchthys (عرض الملف الشخصي) 17 مايو، 2012 2:41:56 م
pdenisowski (عرض الملف الشخصي) 17 مايو، 2012 5:18:55 م
brodicius:I'm looking for some information on the origin of some words in Esperanto. Namely, the languages from which they're quite likely to have come. I've found Wiktionary to be helpful to a certain degree, yet even for some words quite obviously derived from a given language, will cite only that language's parent as a source (typically Latin or Greek).I have the Konciza Etimologia Vortaro by André Cherpillod (available from Esperanto-USA's retbutiko). It's a great resource and very easy to use -- I think it's probably what you're looking for.
Does such a resource documenting this exist?
There is also a five volume Etimologia Vortaro de Esperanto which I have not yet seen, but my feeling is that this set is more for the specialist than for the casual Esperantist.
Amike,
Paul
brodicius (عرض الملف الشخصي) 17 مايو، 2012 5:36:13 م
I may end up looking into the Etimologia Vortaro series you mentioned, pdenisowski. I'm not so much 'casual Esperantist' as I am 'impassioned language nerd'.
Thanks, everyone!
Kirilo81 (عرض الملف الشخصي) 17 مايو، 2012 7:18:46 م
pdenisowski:Yes, by Ebbe Vilborg; it covers only the Fundamento + oficialaj aldonoj vocabulary (much less than Cherpillod's book) and contains much more details and discussion. The average E-ist should do fine with Cherpillod.
There is also a five volume Etimologia Vortaro de Esperanto which I have not yet seen, but my feeling is that this set is more for the specialist than for the casual Esperantist.