Ujumbe: 14
Lugha: English
LordRatte (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 5 Desemba 2015 6:57:46 alasiri
-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 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 5 Desemba 2015 7:19:15 alasiri
rann (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 5 Desemba 2015 8:12:39 alasiri
*Note: I'm pretty sure "feministo" is the most common word for feminist.
LordRatte (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 5 Desemba 2015 8:42:03 alasiri
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 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 5 Desemba 2015 9:16:54 alasiri
erinja (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 5 Desemba 2015 11:10:28 alasiri
Vestitor (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 6 Desemba 2015 12:11:35 asubuhi
se (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 6 Desemba 2015 5:07:20 asubuhi
bartlett22183 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 6 Desemba 2015 8:12:21 alasiri
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 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 6 Desemba 2015 10:14:07 alasiri
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.