Volapük

Volapük (/ˈvɒləpʊk/ in English;[2] [volaˈpyk] in Volapük) is a constructed language created between 1879 and 1880 by Johann Martin Schleyer, a Roman Catholic priest in Baden, Germany, who believed that God had told him in a dream to create an international language. Volapük conventions took place in 1884 (Friedrichshafen), 1887 (Munich) and 1889 (Paris). The first two conventions used German, and the last conference used only Volapük. In 1889, there were an estimated 283 clubs, 25 periodicals in or about Volapük, and 316 textbooks in 25 languages;[3] at that time the language claimed nearly a million adherents.[4] Volapük was largely displaced between late 19th and early 20th century by Esperanto.[5]

Volapük
Volapük, Volapük nulik
Logo of the Volapük movement (2nd phase)
Created byJohann Martin Schleyer
Date1879–1880
Setting and usageInternational: mostly in Europe
Users20 (2000)[1]
Purpose
Latin
Sourcesvocabulary from English, German, and French
Official status
Regulated byKadäm Volapüka
Language codes
ISO 639-1vo
ISO 639-2vol
ISO 639-3vol
Glottologvola1234  Volapük

History

Commemorative inscription for J. M. Schleyer on the wall of the parsonage in Litzelstetten, Konstanz, written in Volapük and German:
Menade bal – püki bal
Eine Menschheit – eine Sprache
(One mankind – one language)

Schleyer first published a sketch of Volapük in May 1879 in Sionsharfe, a Catholic poetry magazine of which he was editor. This was followed in 1880 by a full-length book in German. Schleyer himself did not write books on Volapük in other languages, but other authors soon did.

André Cherpillod writes of the third Volapük convention,

In August 1889 the third convention was held in Paris. About two hundred people from many countries attended. And, unlike in the first two conventions, people spoke only Volapük. For the first time in the history of mankind, sixteen years before the Boulogne convention, an international convention spoke an international language.[6]

The Dutch cryptographer Auguste Kerckhoffs was for a number of years Director of the Academy of Volapük, and introduced the movement to several countries. The French Association for the Propagation of Volapük was authorized on 8 April 1886, with A. Lourdelet as President and a central committee that included the deputy Edgar Raoul-Duval.[7] However, tensions arose between Kerckhoffs and others in the Academy, who wanted reforms made to the language, and Schleyer, who insisted strongly on retaining his proprietary rights. This led to schism, with much of the Academy abandoning Schleyer's Volapük in favor of Idiom Neutral and other new constructed language projects. Another reason for the decline of Volapük may have been the rise of Esperanto. In 1887 the first Esperanto book (Unua Libro) was published. Many Volapük clubs became Esperanto clubs.

By 1890 the movement was in disarray, with violent arguments among the members. Schleyer resigned from the Volapük Academy and created a rival academy. Derived languages such as Nal Bino, Balta, Bopal, Spelin, Dil and Orba were invented and quickly forgotten.[8][9]

1898 broadsheet advertising Volapük.

In the 1920s, Arie de Jong, with the consent of the leaders of the small remnant of Volapük speakers, made a revision of Volapük which was published in 1931 (now called Volapük Nulik "New Volapük" as opposed to the Volapük Rigik 'Original Volapük' of Schleyer). This revision was accepted by the few speakers of the language. De Jong simplified the grammar, eliminating some rarely used verb forms, and eliminated some gendered pronouns and gendered verb endings. He also rehabilitated the phoneme /r/ and used it to make some morphemes more recognizable. For instance, lömib "rain" became rein.[10] Volapük enjoyed a brief renewal of popularity in the Netherlands and Germany under de Jong's leadership, but was suppressed (along with other constructed languages) in countries under Nazi rule and never recovered.

Regarding the success of this artificial language, the Spanish scientist Santiago Ramón y Cajal wrote in the first edition of his Tonics of Willingness, in 1898:

Nowadays, many scientific papers are published in more than six languages. To the likely attempt of restoring Latin or using Esperanto as the universal language of science, wise men have responded by multiplying the number of languages in which scientific works are published. We have to acknowledge that Volapük or Esperanto are practically one more language to be learnt. This result was predictable because neither the essentially popularized and democratic tendencies of modern knowledge, nor the economic views of authors and editors consent in a different way.[11]

However, some years later (1920), in the third edition of the same book, he added the following footnote to the former assertion: "As it was presumable, nowadays -1920-, the brand new Volapük has been forgotten definitively. We forecast the same for Esperanto."

Large Volapük collections are held by the International Esperanto Museum[12] in Vienna, Austria; the Center for Documentation and Study about the International Language in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland; and the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[13] In 2000 there were an estimated 20 Volapük speakers in the world.[1]

In December 2007 it was reported that the Volapük version of Wikipedia had recently jumped to 15th place among language editions, with more than 112,000 articles. [14] A few months earlier there had been only 797 articles. The massive increase in the size of "Vükiped", bringing it ahead of the Esperanto Wikipedia, was due to an enthusiast who had used a computer program to automatically create geographical articles, many on small villages. The motive was to gain visibility for the language.[15] By March 2013 the Esperanto Wikipedia, with a very active user community, had risen to 176,792 articles, while the Volapük Wikipedia had at that point 119,091 articles.[16]

There has been a continuous Volapük speaker community since Schleyer's time, with an unbroken succession of Cifals (leaders). These were:

  1. Johann Martin Schleyer 1879–1912
  2. Albert Sleumer 1912–1948
  3. Arie de Jong (provisionally) 1947–1948,[17] 1951–1957[18]
  4. Jakob Sprenger 1948–1950
  5. Johann Schmidt 1950–1977
  6. Johann Krüger 1977–1983
  7. Brian Bishop 1984–2014
  8. Hermann Philipps 2014–present[19][20]

Orthography and pronunciation

Schleyer proposed alternate forms for the umlaut vowels, but they were rarely used.

The alphabet is as follows:[21][22][23]

letterIPA
aa~ɑ
ä (ꞛ)ɛ~æ
bb
c~
dd
ee
ff
letterIPA
gɡ
hh
ii
jʃ~ʒ
kk
ll
mm
letterIPA
nn
oo~ɔ
ö (ꞝ)ø
pp
(r)r
ss~z
tt
letterIPA
uu
ü (ꞟ)y
vv
xks
yj
zts~dz

That is, the vowel letters ä, ö, ü have the pronunciations they do in German. C is pronounced like English j or ch, and j like English sh, or like the s in English "usually". /s/ is pronounced [z] after voiced consonants, for example bs, ds, gs, ls, as it is in English. R was not found in the original proposal.

The letters ä, ö, and ü do not have alternative forms such as the ae, oe, and ue of German, but Schleyer proposed alternate forms , , and for them, all of which are part of Unicode since version 7.0 released in June 2014:[24]

  • U+A79A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER VOLAPUK AE
  • U+A79B LATIN SMALL LETTER VOLAPUK AE
  • U+A79C LATIN CAPITAL LETTER VOLAPUK OE
  • U+A79D LATIN SMALL LETTER VOLAPUK OE
  • U+A79E LATIN CAPITAL LETTER VOLAPUK UE
  • U+A79F LATIN SMALL LETTER VOLAPUK UE

There are no diphthongs; each vowel letter is pronounced separately.

Special consonantal letters

The author Alfred A. Post mentions in his Comprehensive Volapük Grammar some additional letters created by Schleyer:

And the following letters are constructed by the inventor to designate sounds which occasionally occur 

Most of these letters can already be found in Unicode:

  • U+00E5 å LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE (U+00C5 Å LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE)
  • U+0127 ħ LATIN SMALL LETTER H WITH STROKE (U+0126 Ħ LATIN CAPITAL LETTER H WITH STROKE)
  • U+0302 ̂ COMBINING CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT (for composing and )
  • U+1D87 LATIN SMALL LETTER N WITH PALATAL HOOK
  • U+0237 ȷ LATIN SMALL LETTER DOTLESS J
  • U+0283 ʃ LATIN SMALL LETTER ESH (U+01A9 Ʃ LATIN CAPITAL LETTER ESH)

Letter r

Some phonemes, such as ö /ø/ and ü /y/, were not avoided.[25]

Schleyer's 1880 Volapük as well as Modern Volapük has minimal l–r pairs such as rel "religion" versus lel "iron".

Syllabic stress

Polysyllabic words are always stressed on the final vowel; for example, neai "never" is pronounced [ne.a.ˈi]. (However, the question clitic "-li" does not affect the stress of the word it attaches to.) Where there is secondary stress, as is found in the compounding of several roots together, it is found on the final syllable between the roots.

Vocabulary

Schleyer adapted the vocabulary mostly from English, with a smattering of German and French. Some words remain readily recognizable for a speaker of one of the source languages, but many others are modified beyond easy recognition.[26] For instance, vol and pük are derived from the English words world and speak. Although unimportant linguistically, and regardless of the simplicity and consistency of the stress rule, these deformations were greatly mocked by the language's detractors. It seems to have been Schleyer's intention, however, to alter its loan words in such a way that they would be hard to recognise, thus losing their ties to the languages (and, by extension, nations) from which they came. Conversely, Esperanto and Interlingua are commonly criticized as being much easier to learn for Europeans than for those with non-European native languages.

Grammar

The grammar is based on that of typical European languages, but with an agglutinative character: grammatical inflections are indicated by stringing together separate affixes for each element of meaning.

Nouns

Nouns inflect for case and number, but not for gender.

The following is the declension of the Volapük word vol "world":

CaseSingularPlural
Nominative vol (world)vols (worlds)
Genitive vola (of the world)volas (of the worlds)
Dative vole (to the world)voles (to the worlds)
Accusative voli (world)volis (worlds)

As in German, the Volapük noun has four cases: nominative, genitive, dative and accusative. In compound words, the first part of the compound is usually separated from the second by the genitive termination -a, e.g. Vola-pük, "of-world language": "language of the world". However, the other case endings (-e dative, -i accusative) are sometimes used if applicable, or the roots may be agglutinated in the nominative, with no separating vowel.

Adjectives and adverbs

Adjectives, formed by the suffix -ik, normally follow the noun they qualify. They do not agree with the noun in number and case in that position, but do if they precede the noun, are separated from it by intervening words, or stand alone. Adverbs are formed by suffixing -o, either to the root or to the adjectival -ik (gudik "good", gudiko "well"); they normally follow the verb or adjective they modify.

Pronouns

The pronouns begin with o-. In the singular, they are ob "I", ol "thou", om "he/it", of "she", os (impersonal),[27] on "one", ok "oneself". They are pluralized with -s: obs "we", ols "ye", oms "they". The possessive may be formed with either the genitive -a or with adjectival -ik: oba or obik "my". Prepositions, conjunctions and interjections are also formed from noun roots by appending appropriate suffixes.

Verbs

The verb carries a fine degree of detail, with morphemes marking tense, aspect, voice, person, number and (in the third person) the subject's gender. However, many of these categories are optional, and a verb can stand in an unmarked state. A Volapük verb can be conjugated in 1,584 ways (including infinitives and reflexives).[28]

Person

For the simple present, the pronouns are suffixed to the verb stem:

binob I am, binol thou art,

etc. The present passive takes the prefix pa-:

palöfons they are loved.
Tense, aspect, and voice

The three tenses in the indicative, and the three perfect aspects, each take a characteristic vowel prefix:

TensePrefix
Present a-
Past ä-
Present perfect e-
Past perfect i-
Future o-
Future perfect u-

The present-tense prefix is omitted in the active voice, so:

binob I am, äbinol you were, ebinom he has been, ibinof she had been, obinos it will be, ubinon one will have been.

These are seen as being more distant from the present tense the further the vowel is from [a] in vowel space, and they can be used with temporal words to indicate distance in the past or future. For example, from del 'day',

adelo today, odelo tomorrow, udelo the day after tomorrow, ädelo yesterday, edelo the day before yesterday, idelo three days ago.

The passive voice is formed with p-, and here the a is required for the present tense:

palöfob I am loved, pälogol you were seen, pologobs we will be seen.
Infinitive mood

The infinitive is formed with the suffix -ön. It can be combined with tense/aspect prefixes:

Logön to see, elogön to have seen.
Interrogative mood

Yes–no questions are indicated with the particle li:

Pälogom-li was he seen?

The hyphen indicates that the syllable li does not take stress. It occurs before the verb to avoid a sequence of three consonants or a double el: li-pälogol? li-binoms?

Participles and the habitual aspect

Participles, both active and passive, are formed in -öl:

Logöl seeing, elogöl having seen, ologöl being about to see, palogöl seen (being seen), pelogöl seen (having been seen), pologöl about to be seen.

Binob penöl is literally 'I am writing', though penob is also used. For "I write" as habitual action, the habitual aspect is used. This is formed by adding -i- after the tense prefix, and here again the present-tense a- is required. The forms are thus active ai-, äi-, ei-, ii-, oi-, ui-, passive pai-, päi-, pei-, pii-, poi-, pui-. All are pronounced as two syllables.

Aifidob bodi I eat bread (as a daily occurrence), äipenob penedis I used to write letters.

With temporal words,

aidelo daily (at the present time)
The imperative moods

The imperative -öd follows the person suffix:

Gololöd! Go! (to one person), gololsöd! go! (to more than one person)

Optative -ös is used for courteous requests, and jussive -öz an emphatic command.

Conditional mood

Conditionals are formed with -la for the protasis (if-clause) and -öv for the apodosis (then-clause):

If äbinob-la liegik, äbinoböv givik – if I were rich I would be generous.
Ibinomöv givik, if ibinom-la liegik – he would have been generous if he had been rich.

Note that the tense changes as well, so that in the first example the past tense is used even though the present tense is intended. Like the question particle, the -la is written with a hyphen to indicate that it is not stressed in speech.

Potential mood

A potential mood is formed with -öx:

Pelomöx he might pay.
Reflexive verbs

Reflexive forms are made from the active voice and the pronoun ok:

Vatükob I wash, vatükobok (or vatükob obi) I wash myself.

In the third person, the periphrastic form of vatükomok (he washes himself) must use the reflexive pronoun, vatükom oki, as vatükom omi would mean "he washes him (someone else)".

The plural -s may precede or follow the reflexive, as the speaker chooses:

vatükomoks or vatükomsok they wash themselves.

Here there is a meaningful distinction between joining the pronoun to the verb, and inflecting it independently:

Löfobsok we love ourselves, löfobs obis we love each other.
Gerundive

The gerundive arguments are active ö-, passive pö-.

Examples

The Lord's Prayer

1880 Schleyer Volapük 1930 de Jong Volapük
O Fat obas, kel binol in süls, O Fat obas, kel binol in süls!
paisaludomöz nem ola! Nem olik pasalüdükonöd!
Kömomöd monargän ola! Regän ola kömonöd!
Jenomöz vil olik, äs in sül, i su tal! Vil olik jenonöd, äsä in sül, i su tal!
Bodi obsik vädeliki givolös obes adelo! Givolös obes adelo bodi aldelik obsik!
E pardolös obes debis obsik, E pardolös obes döbotis obsik,
äs id obs aipardobs debeles obas. äsä i obs pardobs utanes, kels edöbons kol obs.
E no obis nindukolös in tendadi; E no blufodolös obis,
sod aidalivolös obis de bad. ab livükolös obis de bad!
(Ibä dutons lü ol regän, e nämäd e glor jü ün laidüp.)
Jenosöd! So binosös!

Sample text

Ven lärnoy püki votik, vödastok plösenon fikulis. Mutoy ai dönu sukön vödis nesevädik, e seko nited paperon. In dil donatida, ye, säkäd at pebemaston, bi tradut tefik vöda alik pubon dis vöds Volapükik. Välot reidedas sökon, e pamobos, das vöds Volapükik pareidons laodiko. Gramat e stabavöds ya pedunons in nüdug; too loged viföfik traduta pakomandos ad garanön, das sinif valodik pegeton. Binos prinsip sagatik, kel sagon, das stud nemödik a del binos gudikum, ka stud mödik süpo.

Translation: When one is learning another language, vocabulary presents difficulties. One must continuously search for unknown words, and consequently interest is lost. In the elementary part, however, this problem has been overcome, because the relevant translation of each word appears below the Volapük words. A selection of readings follows, and it is suggested that the Volapük words be read out loud. The grammar and a basic vocabulary have already been done in the introduction; nevertheless, a quick glance at the translation is recommended to ensure that the overall meaning has been acquired. There is a maxim which states that a little study a day is better than a lot of study all at once.

Usage as common noun

The word Volapük or a variation thereof means "nonsense, gibberish" in certain languages, such as Danish[29] volapyk and Esperanto volapukaĵo.[30] In Russian, the term Volapuk encoding refers to writing Cyrillic letters with the Latin alphabet based on what they look like, for example writing “BOJTATTI-OK” instead of волапюк.

See also

References

  1. "Pük, Memory: Why I Learned a Universal Language No One Speaks" by Paul LaFarge. The Village Voice, August 2000.
  2. OED
  3. Handbook of Volapük, Charles E. Sprague (1888)
  4. A History of the English Language, 5th ed. Albert C. Baugh and Thomas Cable. Ch. I English Present and Future; Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River (2002)
  5. The Loom of Language F. Bodmer and L. Hogben (eds.) Ch. XI Pioneers of Language Planning; Allen & Unwin Ltd, London (1944)
  6. Foreword to Konciza Gramatiko de Volapuko, André Cherpillod. Courgenard, 1995.
  7. "Members du Comité Central" (PDF), Le Volapük (in French), Association Français pour la propagation du Volapük: 2–3, retrieved 2018-01-24
  8. Pei, Mario (1968). One Language for the World. New York: Biblo and Tannen. p. 134. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
  9. Okrent, Arika (December 15, 2012). "Trüth, Beaüty and Volapük". berfrois. Retrieved 2013-04-24.
  10. http://www.rickharrison.com/language/dejong.html Arie de Jong's Revision of Volapük (1931) Archived 2006-01-02 at the Wayback Machine by Ed Robertson
  11. Ramón y Cajal, S. (2009): Tonics of Willingness: Rules and Advices about Scientific Investigation. Formación Alcalá: Alcalá la Real, Jaén.
  12. Collection for Planned Languages Archived 2004-06-12 at the Wayback Machine (in German)
  13. Volapük Collection - American Philosophical Society
  14. "Ciekawe wydarzenia w Internecie". PC World (Polish) (in Polish). December 1, 2007. Retrieved 2013-04-26.
  15. Nevelsteen, Yves (2007-09-15). "Volapuko jam superas Esperanton en Vikipedio". Libera Folio (in Esperanto). Retrieved 2013-04-26.
  16. "The keenest Wikipedians". The Economist. 7 March 2013. Retrieved 2013-04-26.
  17. "Dalebüd Cifala de 1947, Yanul 15, Nüm: 1". Vvolapük.com. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
  18. "Dalebüd Cifala de 1950, Dekul 21, Nüm: 4". Vvolapük.com. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
  19. "Yahoo! Groups". yahoo.com.
  20. "Volapuko havas novan Cifal!", La Balta Ondo, May 29, 2014.
  21. Sprague (1888)
  22. "A Quick Look at Volapük". Volapük.com. Volapük.com. Retrieved 2015-11-12.
  23. Ager, Simon. "Volapük alphabet". Omniglot. Kualo. Retrieved 2014-08-31.
  24. "Latin Extended-D Range: A720–A7FF" (PDF). Unicode.org. June 2014. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
  25. Front rounded vowels such as /y/ and /ø/ occur in only 7.10% of the languages in the UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database.
  26. "For example, while it is true that words like vol and pük don't really look like world and speak, but the whole language is not like that. Scores of words are very obvious as what they mean – if, fasilik, gudik/badik, smalik, jerik (pronounced sherík – expensive), bank, bäk (back), deadik". "What the L!", AUXLANG list posting by Thomas Alexander, 15 November 2005.
  27. Os is used for cases where the pronoun has no obvious antecedent, such as "I swear it", and perhaps with impersonal verbs. Om is used for abstract things such as lit "light".
  28. Rogers, Stephen D. (2011). A Dictionary of Made-Up Languages: From Adunaic to Elvish, Zaum to Klingon-- the Anwa (Real) Origins of Invented Lexicons. Avon: Adams Media Corporation. p. 238. ISBN 978-1440528170.
  29. "The Hardest Natural Languages" by Arnold L. Rosenberg (1979)
  30. Burger, Harald, et al. Phraseologie. ISBN 978-3-11-019076-2.

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