Oops! Thanks Richard,
I hadn't noticed that! But I'll jump
right on it, lots of progress on the
ia.wiki and I'm thankful for your
visit and the fact that you enjoyed
seeing how easy it is to understand
with minimal study. Interlingua is
sort of a common denominator
language based on the living Latin
that survives in Spanish/Portuguese,
French, Italian, and in English too.
If anyone notices any such big
or little oopses please bring it
to my attention or to any of the
other interlingua users at
interlingua-coollist(a)yahoogroups.com
Thanks,
Jay B.
Wops! Gratias Richard,
Io non habeva notate isto! Ma io saltara
sur illo, multo progresso con le
ia.wiki e io te regratia tu visita
e le facto que te gustava
vider como facile es comprender
Interlingua con studio minime.
Illo es un lingua basate sur le
latino vivente in espaiol/portugese,
francese, italiano, e anglese etiam.
Si alcuno nota un grande o
parve wops per favor dice me
lo o a qualque altere del altere
usatores de interlingua a:
interlingua-coollist(a)yahoogroups.com
Gratias,
Jay B.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Richard Grevers" <dramatic(a)xtra.co.nz>
To: <wikipedia-l(a)wikipedia.org>
Sent: Saturday, February 22, 2003 4:15 PM
Subject: [Wikipedia-l] Interlingua Language list
http://ia.wikipedia.com/ seems to have based its
(single!) language link
list on the English one - hence there is one language missing from it -
English!
I only came across interlingua for the first time yesterday. It's a
fascinating concept, and I find that with my limited French (2 years of
study 20 years ago) I can follow 75% of an interlingua text, even before
studying its grammar.
Richard Grevers