Romanid
Constructed language created in 1956
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Romanid is a zonal auxiliary language for speakers of Romance languages, intended to be understandable to them without prior study. It was created by the Hungarian language teacher Zoltán Magyar, who published a first version in May 1956 and a second in December 1957. In 1984, he published a phrasebook with a short grammar, in which he presents a slightly more simplified version of the language.[2]
| Romanid | |
|---|---|
| Created by | Zoltán Magyar |
| Date | 1956 |
| Setting and usage | Inter-Romance auxiliary language |
| Users | 10 in Hungary (2001)[1] |
| Purpose | |
| Latin and Latin alphabet | |
| Sources | A posteriori, naturalistic, based on the Romance languages |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | None (mis) |
| Glottolog | None |
| IETF | art-x-romanid |
The language is based on the most common word senses in French, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish.[3] It is rare, even in Hungary where it originated.[4] According to the Russian newspaper Trud, Romanid, from a structural point of view, is "considerably simpler and easier to learn than Esperanto."[5]
Example
- (1957 version)
- Moy lingva project nominad Romanid fu publicad ja in may de pasad ano cam scientific studium in hungar lingva...
- (1984 version)
- Mi lingua project nominat Romanid esed publicat ja in may de pasat an cam scientific studio in hungar lingua...
- (translation)
- My language project called Romanid was published already in May of last year as a scientific study in Hungarian...