Ujumbe: 45
Lugha: English
Altebrilas (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 31 Agosti 2015 12:42:22 alasiri
I had a cap with "saluton!" printed on it. For me, it is the ideal: Any esperantist can recognize it and it is discrete enough for not being suspected of proselytism. Moreover, it is polite and friendly.
Using useful material is interesting: a cap, an umbrella, a bag - if conveniently designed - etc. So people not openly hostile to esperanto can use them...
Bruso (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 31 Agosti 2015 1:18:45 alasiri
Altebrilas:You mean "Parolu Esperanton aŭ Mortu!" isn't polite or friendly?
I had a cap with "saluton!" printed on it. For me, it is the ideal: Any esperantist can recognize it and it is discrete enough for not being suspected of proselytism. Moreover, it is polite and friendly.
Alkanadi (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 31 Agosti 2015 2:10:46 alasiri
http://www.padairy.org/images/estore/gotmilkblack_...
We could make our own that says:
"Havas Esperantan Lakton?"
mbalicki (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 31 Agosti 2015 2:16:25 alasiri
Alkanadi:We could make our own that says:Do you think, that broken Esperanto would do the trick of connecting Esperantists?
"Havas Esperantan Lakton?"
Also, why the milk? I don't get what „esperanta lakto” is supposed to mean… :/
Alkanadi (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 31 Agosti 2015 2:22:21 alasiri
mbalicki:Do you think, that broken Esperanto would do the trick of connecting Esperantists?I have no idea what Esperanta lakto is? Maybe, it is green milk. Maybe, it is milk that comes with an Esperanto label.
Also, why the milk? I don't get what „esperanta lakto” is supposed to mean… :/
Tempodivalse (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 31 Agosti 2015 5:26:10 alasiri
Broken Esperanto, however, is unlikely to impress anyone.
RiotNrrd (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 31 Agosti 2015 9:36:41 alasiri
I have, at times, had numerous t-shirts advertising yacht clubs I've never heard of (nor have evidence even exist), not to mention not ever having owned a yacht. I know I've worn shirts advertising bands whose songs I've never heard, and programming languages I've never written programs in for databases whose names I barely know. The contents of my t-shirts frequently have no bearing on really much of anything other than whether the design will get me kicked out of restaurants and other public venues or not (I tend to favor not).
Pins actually make a statement of "I speak Esperanto" that you can probably pretty reliably count on, unless you're dealing with one of those people who wear, like, 200 pins at a time as some kind of fashion. T-shirts, though, don't really say the same thing even when they literally say the same thing.
Tempodivalse (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 31 Agosti 2015 9:41:22 alasiri
vikungen (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 31 Agosti 2015 9:45:49 alasiri
Vestitor:There is no way I would wear an Esperanto-themed t-shirt. It's a bit zealous and weird. I've seen all this before going to socialist party congresses: people dressed head-to-toe in promotional clothing, carrying a themed bag and taking notes with a themed pen..!Who are you responding to? Certainly not my proposal regarding t-shirts.
No thanks. I'd take the unobtrusive, but visible metal pin-badge. I don't want to look like a clown.
noelekim (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 31 Agosti 2015 9:56:26 alasiri