Sporočila: 22
Jezik: English
Miland (Prikaži profil) 07. avgust 2008 09:52:13
To say that ujo is racist is going too far. I refer to a tendency to identify country and ethnic group, nothing more. I can think of two other reasons for this.
(a) The suffix has been used in the past for fruit trees (e.g. pomujo), so that X-ujo implies an organic connection between X-o and X-ujo.
(b) Countries where the inhabitants were named X-o instead of X-ano tended to be rulers and colonisers, not the colonised, though this pattern is not universal.
I should say that I don't believe that Zamenhof would invent a suffix to encourage racism. He originated our language to exert an influence against such attitudes. That is why I don't feel any scruples if I use ujo in speech myself.
(a) The suffix has been used in the past for fruit trees (e.g. pomujo), so that X-ujo implies an organic connection between X-o and X-ujo.
(b) Countries where the inhabitants were named X-o instead of X-ano tended to be rulers and colonisers, not the colonised, though this pattern is not universal.
I should say that I don't believe that Zamenhof would invent a suffix to encourage racism. He originated our language to exert an influence against such attitudes. That is why I don't feel any scruples if I use ujo in speech myself.
Rao (Prikaži profil) 09. avgust 2008 16:50:47
erinja:Germanio is a name of a place based on a name of a people. Germanujo implies that it is a place *for* a certain type a person. Like a "monujo" is a place designed to hold money, you could say that "Germanujo" is a place designed to contain germanoj.According to that (polysemy killer) rationalization, there should be a new word for my monujo, because it is designed to contain not only money, and indeed it contains ID cards, calendars and pictures more often than money.
![lango.gif](/images/smileys/lango.gif)
Btw, thanks for your remark on chinese ethnic groups.
![ridulo.gif](/images/smileys/ridulo.gif)