Europanto
Europanto is a macaronic language concept with a fluid vocabulary from European languages of the user's choice or need. It was conceived in 1996 by Diego Marani (a journalist, author and translator for the European Council of Ministers in Brussels) based on the common practice of word-borrowing usage of many European languages. Marani used it in response to the perceived dominance of the English language; it is an emulation of the effect that non-native speakers struggling to learn a language typically add words and phrases from their native language to express their meanings clearly.[1]
Europanto | |
---|---|
Created by | Diego Marani |
Date | 1996 |
Setting and usage | European Union administration |
Purpose | jest
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | None (mis ) |
Glottolog | None |
The main concept of Europanto is that there are no fixed rules—merely a set of suggestions. This means that anybody can start to speak Europanto immediately; on the other hand, it is the speaker's responsibility to draw on an assumed common vocabulary and grammar to communicate.
Marani wrote regular newspaper columns about the language and published a novel using it. As of 2005 he was no longer actively promoting it.
Origin of the name
The language's name "europanto" is a portmanteau of Europa (the word for Europe in some European languages) and the Greek root παντώς- ("pantos-"; in English "all", "whole") and bears an intentional similarity with the name of the most widely spoken constructed international auxiliary language Esperanto.
Language code
The ISO 639-3 standard draft used to have the code eur
for this constructed language, but it was retired on 16 January 2009, with the reason “Nonexistent”.[2] For this reason, it is also not a valid language subtag for BCP 47 as it was not registered in the IANA Language Subtags Registry (waiting for a decision for the deletion request that was initiated in 2008, but also because ISO 639-3 was still a draft, as well as ISO 5646 which was still not published to allow importing standard ISO 639-3 codes in this registry on 29 July 2009).
Notes and references
- Language for a united Europe (TV news broadcast), RT, 2009-11-10.
- ISO 639 code change request documentation, SIL International, 2010.
External links
- "Europe – Linguistic virus let loose on English", News, UK: BBC, November 23, 1998.
- Europanto, BE.
- Marani, Diego, "Europanto: From productive process to language, or how to cause international English to implode", Europanto, BE.