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]

CreatedbyZoltán Magyar
Date1956
Setting and usageInter-Romance auxiliary language
Users10 in Hungary (2001)[1]
Quick facts Created by, Date ...
Romanid
Created byZoltán Magyar
Date1956
Setting and usageInter-Romance auxiliary language
Users10 in Hungary (2001)[1]
Purpose
Latin and Latin alphabet
SourcesA posteriori, naturalistic, based on the Romance languages
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
GlottologNone
IETFart-x-romanid
Close

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...

References

Literature

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI