Fast links: Interglossa » Glosa »

A Completely Latin Glosa (A Glosa Based Language)

letmein6464 ("letmein6464" <letmein6464@...>) on January 30, 2010

I’m making a Glosa based language but instead of the Greek roots, it’s base= d completely of Latin or it’s derived languages (Spanish, Italian, French, = Portuguese, etc.). The reason for this is because it will be easier for a = Latin language speaker to pick up. By the way, Spanish alone is understood = (on some level) by one in twenty people in the world. Imagine when includin= g similar languages such as Portuguese, Galician, or even the sort of simil= ar Italian, Catalan or the other Latin based languages such as French or Ro= manian.

Also, Spanish is spoken in about 21 countries, French in 28, and F= rench is also one of the most spoken 2nd languages. Another good thing abou= t Latin languages is that many words end in a vowel, there are hardly any f= inal consonants (except in French). In this Glosa based language it is stri= ctly Optional [Consonant-Vowel-Optional N]. There is never a consonant clus= ter or final except for ‘N’.

Another reason for this is that many internat= ional/scientific/Germanic words comes from Latin.

nullify comes from Latin= “Nullus” which is “Nulo” in this Glosa based language.

omnipresent has it= ‘s root from Latin’s “omni” meaning “all”. In this Glosa based language it = because “omi”.

Benefits of learning this language:

Fast links: Interglossa » Glosa »

A Completely Latin Glosa (A Glosa Based Language) - Committee on language planning, FIAS. Coordination: Vergara & Hardy, PhDs.