epo ISO 639

Esperanto, Lingvo Internacia Autonyms

Esperanto

  • Geography

    PL Scattered internationally. Most widely represented in Japan, China, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, United States, Brazil, Belgium, and United Kingdom (in order of number of members in the World Esperanto Association).
  • Language Cloud

A language of Poland

epo
Esperanto, Lingvo Internacia
101,000, all users. L1 users: 1,000 (Corsetti et al 2004), increasing. L2 users: 100,000 (2017 S.V. Nielsen).
Scattered internationally. Most widely represented in Japan, China, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, United States, Brazil, Belgium, and United Kingdom (in order of number of members in the World Esperanto Association).
3 (Wider communication). Constructed language in 1887 by L. L. Zamenhof hoping to bring about world peace. Widely spoken internationally in the 20th century. Used at home, communication, among close friends, literature, and in literary publications.
Constructed language
SVO; prepositions; genitives, relatives after noun heads; articles, adjectives, numerals before noun heads; question word initial; definite article; case-marking (2 cases); passives; tense; comparative word; 23 consonant and 5 vowel phonemes; non-tonal; stress on penultimate syllable.
L1 users learn Esperanto from birth from Esperanto-speaking parents. Home, Esperanto clubs and associations. Used by all. Positive attitudes.
Literature. Periodicals. Radio. Videos. Dictionary. Grammar. Bible: 1926. Agency: World Esperanto Association.
Latin script [Latn].
Non-indigenous. Most widely used constructed language in the world. Developed 1887 by L. L. Zamenhof, a Polish ophthalmologist. For this reason, Poland has been selected as the primary country for Esperanto.
OLAC resources in and about Esperanto