Viestejä: 14
Kieli: English
LordRatte (Näytä profiilli) 5. joulukuuta 2015 18.57.46
-in- makes it female.
-ism- makes it a belief.
-ul- makes it a person.
-o makes it a noun.
This seems like it should give "feminist".
My main source is this Lernu! page.
bartlett22183 (Näytä profiilli) 5. joulukuuta 2015 19.19.15
rann (Näytä profiilli) 5. joulukuuta 2015 20.12.39
*Note: I'm pretty sure "feministo" is the most common word for feminist.
LordRatte (Näytä profiilli) 5. joulukuuta 2015 20.42.03
feministo" (it's in the lernu vortaro).I assumed there was a more natural word for it, rann. The thought was more of a semantic curiosity.
As for the suffixes used, I trust that my intuition will become more comfortable as I adapt to the language.
Tempodivalse (Näytä profiilli) 5. joulukuuta 2015 21.16.54
erinja (Näytä profiilli) 5. joulukuuta 2015 23.10.28
Vestitor (Näytä profiilli) 6. joulukuuta 2015 0.11.35
se (Näytä profiilli) 6. joulukuuta 2015 5.07.20
bartlett22183 (Näytä profiilli) 6. joulukuuta 2015 20.12.21
se:Wikipedia says, preferable use inismo but lack sourcesThis would make 'inismo' comparable to "feminism" and 'inismulo' comparable to "feminist" as I suggested earlier. A matter, as I see it, is to what extent to adopt / adapt so-called international words and to what extent to compound words out of existing E-o material (in this case affixes usable as quasi-standalone morphemes). What might Zamenhof have done, if the notions of "feminism / feminist" had been current in his day?
Vestitor (Näytä profiilli) 6. joulukuuta 2015 22.14.07
bartlett22183:What might Zamenhof have done, if the notions of "feminism / feminist" had been current in his day?He'd have had to cook all his own meals in between all those long sessions at his desk.