Was playing a word came and a hint for that language was "the palnned language for the world" or something to thag degree. When i looked it up it seems to have occult connection. Has anyone heard about this?
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Yup, it was invented several decades ago by an idealist who wanted to create a universal language. It never really caught on.
Reminds me of the time travelling economic migrants from South Park. The Goobacks spoke Esperanto.
A global language? Like globalist?
Sort of. As I recall, the chief complaint about the made-up language was that it was too biased toward Romanic (Latin) languages and ignored Asian and native tongues. It was very Eurocentric, so it was doomed from the outset as a "universal language."
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Esperanto
Doomed. The root word in "esperanto" means to wait, in many latin tongues. in spanish "esperar" means to wait.
I believe the root word is HOPE...
From: https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=esperanto
I have a feeling that the cabal wanted English to be a lingua franca at one point which is why it is so widespread now. I have heard that they expanded some themes and concepts in English and introduced them in "Shakespeare's" work.
I wonder! My teacher dad wonder whether Bacon and others had a major hand in Shakespeare's work.
1000 or more years ago, Britain was a provincial part of Europe. How did we get an empire? How do we have one of the finance cities of the world?
It was more than several decades ago. It was post ww2 with the attempt at the League of Nations; Esperanto was meant to be the unifying world language everyone would work together with but it quickly became a null point because everyone had to learn English to do business with America making English the world language by default. If I renege correctly, it was FDR's retarded pet project.
Post WWII, several decades ago.
TomAto, toMAHto, potato, poTAHto.
It was almost 80 years ago my guy. "Several decades ago" is the 90's.
TomAto, tomMAHto.
There is no specific measure of "several."
I had a go at learning it at one point!
I think it was intended to be a language for international espionage and so on. A cabal thing if you ask me.
There are native first language speakers.
William Shatner did a play in this language on tv back in the 60's.
Nenio povas haltigi tion, kio venas.
Ankaŭ, Joe Biden tuŝas infanojn.
Makes me want to Latin harder! Lol
Yes, developed and then used in the Occult Circles, interestingly George Soros is actually referred to directly in this digital article I found on it's history.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20180110-the-invented-language-that-found-a-second-life-online
To replace English as the language the peoples of the world could use to communicate with each other. #FakeLanguage.
If they don't like English then we could bring back Latin. Latin was taught in schools here, in my father's time. Universal language for centuries . . .
I know this thread is a couple of days old, but I was reading about Soros due to the rumors that he kicked the bucket, and found this on George's Wikipedia page:
"His father Tivadar (also known as Teodoro Ŝvarc) was a lawyer and a well-known Esperanto author who edited the Esperanto literary magazine Literatura Mondo and raised his son to speak the language."
Interesting little tidbit, eh?
Yup —couple of decades ago. There are benefits to being able to communicate with all peoples without it being “translated”. Maybe it never took off because they want us divided….or maybe it’s more like the metric system.
A common language has its benefits though…Kinda like mathematics being the language with which we could communicate w “aliens”
Esperanto was a language CREATED to be uniform in every way. No different pronunciations, different spellings of the same words, no difference in pronunciations of the same letters.
It was modeled after many languages. Primarily the Spanish language.
It's currently spoken by less than 10000 people worldwide.
This was done decades ago, 1940s.
Early 20th century ( If I remember correctly) plan to create a language that could be a universal, using mostly English as the stem. Never took off, though.
Sure. Back in the Fifties, it was being touted as a "universal language" that would be relatively easy for most people to learn. In fact, it was heavily based on Romance languages, and wasn't so "universal" after all.
William Shatner made a film in the language of Esperanto