Kwa maudhui

Terminations and definitions

ya sebsou, 17 Mei 2017

Ujumbe: 6

Lugha: English

sebsou (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 17 Mei 2017 6:09:52 alasiri

( Sorry for faults and simply vocabulary, I'm french ^^)

Hi,
I have begun esperanto yesterday, and yet I have two questions:
First, i want to be sure about the facts that esperanto gives several names for only one entity.
For exemple, apple tree can be translate to pomarbo or pomujo. So esperantan give world to an objet no in fonction of his ethymological origin but by his definition, which can be change. Is it true ?

Secondly I would to know how cummulate terminations, for exemple how to say waitress, with the combination of -in- and -ist- ?

sergejm (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 17 Mei 2017 7:42:14 alasiri

Uzing -ujo for land names and trees does not seem good. So instead of it it is better to uze -lando or -io and -arbo.
In other cases they can form Esperanto word uzing Esperanto root and suffixes or uzing international word adding Esperanto ending, such as -o.
waitress = kelnerino. Suffix -ist- is not used here.
Suffix -ist- is added before -in-: kuiristino (female cook)
-in- is added before -et-: knabineto (little girl)

david_uk (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 18 Mei 2017 10:08:46 asubuhi

Sergejm is correct.

Using -ujo for pomujo to mean an apple tree is obsolete.

-ujo means a containter, so pomujo could be a barrel or basket of apples. But is is not a good way to refer to a tree.

sudanglo (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 18 Mei 2017 11:10:51 asubuhi

Confirmed - pomujo for apple tree is archaic.

However many Esperantists would still prefer to say Anglujo, Francujo rather than Anglio, Francio

sebsou (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 18 Mei 2017 4:38:30 alasiri

Thanks all, for your answer, it seems more clear now ridulo.gif

nornen (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 18 Mei 2017 8:26:39 alasiri

The order of the morphemes can change the meaning.

Let's say a "ĉevalisto" is a person who works with horses, professionally or other, no matter whether he is a horse breeder, a horse racer or a horse wisperer.

Now if this person is female, you can call her a "ĉevalistino".
If this person only works with mares and never with stallions or geldings, you can call him a "ĉevalinisto".
If this person only works with mares and is female, you can call her a "ĉevalinistino".

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