Practical use
貼文者: kannouteki_neko, 2005年5月19日
訊息: 22
語言: English
kannouteki_neko (顯示個人資料) 2005年5月19日上午1:45:43
I'm finding it fun to learn, and yet I wonder if I should put my efforts into a far more practical foreign language. I'm already tackling Vietnamese for better communication with my in-laws, but even that language has little practicality on the grand scale unless I'm in Vietnam. I know quite a bit of french but am too rusty to speak it, instead I can only read and write it. But with these languages there are a lot of real people speaking the languages, where as Esperanto strikes me along the same lines as Latin does: no one speaks it.
Does anyone see a future for it? Are there any articles, groups, or websites out there that are trying to petition for a more wide-spread use of the language?
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bacoba (顯示個人資料) 2005年5月19日下午9:19:08
kannouteki_neko (顯示個人資料) 2005年5月19日下午11:29:36
It doesn't stop me from proceeding to learn the language, I love languages and this is certainly an interesting concept, if it were to ever get into the mainstream I want to be a part of that. But I think in order for that to happen it has to be receiving more attention, and the organizations in existence currently are not providing that kind of push at all. I wish I could do something myself really, but it takes more than just one person.
It would have incredible uses in international politics and what have you, which is widely promoted as a use for the language, but the problem is that it cannot be useful until more people start recognizing it and realizing its potential.
I guess it needs more publicity and information available to the general public. Ironically, the information I often find on esperanto is published *in* esperanto and not always with a translation available. This is pretty much useless for people who don't know enough of the language or don't know any of the language. It needs to have wide-spread publicity in local languages to government/educational/social/etc institutions, *off* the internet. The internet is great, but we still live in a real world with real people who love to have physical tangeable things to read rather than cyber-studying. I far prefer to read a magazine than a website. And it needs the support in local regions on the wider scale rather than in scattered barely-existent organizations with people who seem to be neglecting the organization itself. I can't be the only one who thinks if you want something you need to committ fully to it and not slack at it.
Just my thoughts.
Machjo (顯示個人資料) 2005年5月29日上午2:27:37
http://es.chinabroadcast.cn/
http://www.espero.com.cn/
http://www.china.com.cn/world/index.htm
I've also found Esperanto to be useful in accessing information which might not necessarily be available in English in China as well. It's also a useful language for travelling, and to make friends who do tend to be more open to the world than your average person, overall (like any community, there are exceptions of course, but I do find that on average Esperantists do tend to be more open to the world.
misinca (顯示個人資料) 2005年6月13日下午4:53:05
michel (顯示個人資料) 2005年6月14日下午7:35:24
sarcasmdude1292 (顯示個人資料) 2005年8月24日下午11:26:20
dameda (顯示個人資料) 2005年8月25日上午6:45:37
1. Even if it is a good choice, you cannot really force people to speak Esperanto.
2. People won't make themselves learn it unless they think they can make money from it. That is why English is so big these days. It seems that English currently fulfills many functions that Esperanto theoretically should.
3. As another poster mentioned, Esperanto clubs don't seem to be terribly active. That is also true where I live. I have met one speaker in my area, who is a great guy, but the so-called club has no real meetings or anything. I have heard rumors that many Esperanto clubs in the USA are like this, and are often dominated by a very few speakers. Supposedly, it is much bigger in other parts of the world.
4. I think Esperanto has actually survived very well, considering that it was persecuted. The only reason I ever learned it was because I could do so through the Internet. I also practice it in chatrooms. I think that will ensure its survival.
5. I honestly believe that having a world interlanguage is a great concept and a wonderful goal, but let's face it - it goes against human nature. People are quite accustomed to dividing themselves into groups and excluding outsiders. It's human nature, and language is part of it. A lot of people do it within the Esperanto movement - people sometimes invent their own languages and argue which conlang works best, and we're back to square one!
I would even say that this forum is an example of people dividing up like this. This is a site regarding Esperanto, but there are several forums, including one for Hebrew speakers, and another for Lithuanian speakers, and one for English speakers, each dealing with Esperanto. We even do this ourselves!
I'm not meaning to be overly critical or anything - just making an observation. I think these are the things that make it difficult for Esperanto to truly catch on more.
Machjo (顯示個人資料) 2005年8月27日上午1:19:42
I'll be teaching Esperanto in a local middle school next week, and am likewise working on an Esperanto web-page. And from my experience, most who choose to learn Esperanto do so out of principle, curiosity, or other reason unrelated to money or profit. So while the above might apply to the west, it certainly doesn't apply quite as much here, though maybe to some extent.
mkj1887 (顯示個人資料) 2015年1月28日下午8:22:31
kannouteki_neko:Does anyone believe that Esperanto will one day have a truly world-wide practical use? After a hundred years of existence it hasn't really gotten very far.
I'm finding it fun to learn, and yet I wonder if I should put my efforts into a far more practical foreign language. I'm already tackling Vietnamese for better communication with my in-laws, but even that language has little practicality on the grand scale unless I'm in Vietnam. I know quite a bit of french but am too rusty to speak it, instead I can only read and write it. But with these languages there are a lot of real people speaking the languages, where as Esperanto strikes me along the same lines as Latin does: no one speaks it.
Does anyone see a future for it? Are there any articles, groups, or websites out there that are trying to petition for a more wide-spread use of the language?
~ ~