Naturalistic planned language
Naturalistic planned language | ||
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ISO 639 -1 |
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ISO 639 -2 |
art (other planned languages) |
A naturalistic planned language is a planned language that has a simplified grammar , but takes over the relatively irregular word formation of a natural language or language family (mostly the Romance languages ) and therefore looks more “natural” than other planned languages in the opinion of the respective author.
Important naturalistic planned languages (all based on the Romance languages) are Interlingue (published in 1922 under the name Occidental ), Novial (1928) and Interlingua (1951). Ido (1907) and INTAL (1954/1978) are attempts to give Esperanto naturalistic traits.
swell
- ↑ Detlev Blanke : The ancient languages and the problem of a world auxiliary language. In: Interlinguistic Contributions. Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main et al. 2006, pp. 35–47.