メッセージ: 24
言語: English
mnlg (プロフィールを表示) 2008年3月3日 19:05:10
bonobobabe:What's a kabeanto?Someone who abruptly leaves the Esperanto community, with no compelling reason.
Miland (プロフィールを表示) 2008年3月3日 19:42:52
You'll find some interesting information about him on the following webpage:
http://donh.best.vwh.net/Esperanto/EBook/chap09.ht...
So the verb kabei has entered the language as a word for breaking away from the movement. I switched from the word kabeanto to kabeinto in the course of this thread because the action occurred in the past; an Esperanta parolanto, for example, is someone who's speaking the language in the present.
erinja (プロフィールを表示) 2008年3月3日 20:39:39
http://www.liberafolio.org/2005/persone/kabeinterv...
The interview was done 20 years after he 'kabeis'. In the interview, Kabe speaks of, among other things, how to have good Esperanto writing style (speak a minimum of 3 non-native languages). The most interesting part was that the flaws that Kabe saw in the Esperanto movement of 1910 were still present (according to the interview) in 1931, and in my experience, are still present today!
mnlg (プロフィールを表示) 2008年3月3日 21:33:14
erinja:In the interview, Kabe speaks of, among other things, how to have good Esperanto writing style (speak a minimum of 3 non-native languages).Vikipedio cites this a bit differently, talking about three different languages, not necessarily non-native; and it adds (with reason, imho), that this would have been undoubtedly useful during the very first years of the language.
http://eo.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabe