Transpiranto
Transpiranto | |
---|---|
Created by | Grönköpings Veckoblad |
Date | 1929 |
Setting and usage | Swedish anthology |
Purpose | jest
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | None (mis ) |
Glottolog | None |
Transpiranto is a parody language, a caricature of the international auxiliary language Esperanto. The name contains a play on the Swedish verb transpirera, to perspire. The parody language was developed from 1929 by contributors to the publication Grönköpings Veckoblad ('the Greenville Weekly', a Swedish satirical monthly), through a series of comical translations of well-known Scandinavian songs and poems, more than 200 in all.[citation needed] The first two Transpiranto poems were written by Nils Hasselskog.
In recent years, several poems originally written in Esperanto have been rendered into Transpiranto by Martin Weichert, and have been published in the Swedish Esperanto journal La Espero, and via the internet.
Texts in Transpiranto consist of short phrases taken straight from English, German, French, Spanish, Italian and Latin, alternating with more strictly Esperanto-like fragments, and with Swedish slang.
Esperanto and Transpiranto have been compared by the linguist Bengt Sigurd, a contributor to a Swedish anthology about language issues.[1]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Sigurd, Bengt. 1993. 'Esperanto, transpiranto och andra konstgjorda språk.' [Swedish - 'Esperanto, transpiranto and other artificial languages'] In Jerker Blomqvist and Ulf Teleman, ed. Språk i världen: Broar och barriärer [Swedish - Languages in the World: Bridges and Barriers] Lund University Press. Lund.ISBN 91-7966-212-9
External links
[edit]- An article about Transpiranto, with example poems at Martin Weichert's site (in Esperanto)
- Titles of Transpiranto poems published in Grönköpings Veckoblad 1929; 1969-1970; 1976-83 (in Swedish)
- Titles of Transpiranto poems published in Grönköpings Veckoblad 1984-2003 (in Swedish)
- Six otherwise unpublished Transpiranto poems, with short introduction (in Swedish)
- Several transpiranto translations of Swedish poems and songs[dead link ] (in Swedish)