- and
promoting their language as it stood. At the same time, it gave the
Idists freedom to
continue working on
their own
language for
several more years...
- was an
industrial cooperative of
workers and
farmers (Esperantists and
Idists)
between 1923 and 1943,
established for the
special purpose of
helping to...
-
Friedrich Wilhelm Ostwald (German: [ˈvɪlhɛlm ˈɔstˌvalt] ; 2 September [O.S. 21 August] 1853 – 4
April 1932) was a
German chemist and philosopher. Ostwald...
- Jens Otto
Harry Jes****n (Danish: [ˈʌtsʰo ˈjespɐsn̩]; 16 July 1860 – 30
April 1943) was a
Danish linguist who
specialized in the
grammar of the English...
- te-denove-esperantista,
meaning "first-vola****st-then-esperantist-then-
idist-then-again-esperantist",
which was used in a
review published in Monato...
- the Ido reforms. This
prompted the
observation from
outsiders that the
Idists were
generals without an army, and the
Esperantists were an army with no...
- same: euro,
since most
languages do that. In
common speech, though, many
Idists commonly refer to the
currency as euro and euri as if it got
fully adopted...
- by Zamenhof, in 1907, he
shifted his
allegiance from
Esperanto to Ido:
Idists have used the 1894
reform to
support the
validity of
their movement. Ido...
- now the
independent state of Kyrgyzstan. It was a
utopian Esperantist and
Idist industrial cooperative, Interhelpo.
Pavol Dubček, Alexander's son, described...
-
conservative Idists, he
renounced Ido and
joined the
Occidental movement in 1937. Matejka's
departure from Ido
caused a stir in the
Idist movement; he...