tripper
concept
concept
tour
tour
OpenType_features
OpenType features
figures
figures
ampersands
ampersands
ornaments
ornaments
characterism
characterism
how_does_it_work
how does it work
font_formats
font formats
webfonts
webfonts
making_of
making of
character_set
character set
PDF
PDF
Esperanto
100 speakers
12 language specific characters
ISO 639 code: epo
sample text

Ne estu kukolo se vi estas najtingalo.Ne estu najtingalo aŭ turdo se vi estas hundo. Sed iu ajn povas fari sonon. Ni estas Underware.

Esperanto is an international auxiliary language devised in 1887 by Dr. Ludovic Lazar Zamenhof (1859-1917), a Jewish Eye Doctor, under the pseudonym of 'Doktoro Esperanto'. He originally called the language 'La Internacia Lingvo' (The International Language), but it soon became known as Esperanto, which means 'the hoping one'.
The majority of Esperanto roots are based on Latin, though some vocabulary is taken from modern Romance languages, and from English, German, Polish and Russian. Roots can be combined with affixes to form new words, for example: lerni = to learn, lernejo = a school, lernanto = a pupil/student, lernejestro = a headmaster. The affixes can also stand alone: ejo = place, estro = leader/head, etc.
Today Esperanto is the most widely used international auxiliary language and is particularly popular in Eastern Europe and China. There is a flourishing Esperanto literature including books, magazines and poetry.
source
wikipedia.org, omniglot.com, evertype.com & ethnologue.com