Esperanto (based on the "Baza Radikaro Oficiala")

Type: 
Card Collection
Compatibility: 
Mnemosyne 1.1 +
Status: 
Testing
Author: 
Trevor Davis
Source: 

This Esperanto vocabulary was taken from the Esp - an Esperanto Language Practice Program Copyright (C) 2000 by Michael R. Lewy. The website for Esp states that the word lists were compiled by Doctor Edmund Grimley Evans and was based off the Baza Radikaro Oficiala and that good-hearted permission was given by both Doctor Evans and Professor Geraldo Mattos (President of the Akademio de Esperanto) to use their vocabulary lists for Esp.

Esp was released under the terms of the GPL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html).

Description: 

Esperanto-English vocabulary based on the Baza Radikaro Oficiala.

AttachmentSize
Esperanto_20081203.zip75.38 KB
Esperanto_20091217.zip75.37 KB

Thanks!!!

These cards will be a tremendous help to my entire family in our quest to learn Esperanto.

Question about shorthand used in esperanto deck

first, i'd like to thank you for putting this together into a mnemosyne database. you've saved everyone countless hours of time and helped facilitate the learning of esperanto.

second, i'd like to ask you to help me understand some of the shorthand you used in the cards. specifically when you use 'e.', 'd.', and 't.' i'll give some examples:

{d. abstract idea of quality} {-eco}

{e. of present passive participle (pres. pass. part.)} {-at-}

{t. of adjective} {-a}

Sorry for the late

Sorry for the late reply.

The d., t., and e. were inherited from the word list I parsed from the open source Esp. flash card program.

d. relates to general suffixes and prefixes, t. relates to non-verb word endings, and e. relates to verb related word endings.

Since it seems confusing I will be removing these and replacing them with actual English words. Expect to see a new version of the flash cards in a couple of days.

A new version of the flash

A new version of the flash cards are up!

Shorthand

I think d = denotes, e = ending. Not sure about t.