Tales from the Open Road

The Euro­pean lan­guages are mem­bers of the same fam­i­ly. Their sep­a­rate exis­tence is a myth. For sci­ence, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocab­u­lary. The lan­guages only dif­fer in their gram­mar, their pro­nun­ci­a­tion and their most com­mon words. Every­one real­izes why a new com­mon lan­guage would be desir­able: one could refuse to pay expen­sive translators.

To achieve this, it would be nec­es­sary to have uni­form gram­mar, pro­nun­ci­a­tion and more com­mon words. If sev­er­al lan­guages coa­lesce, the gram­mar of the result­ing lan­guage is more sim­ple and reg­u­lar than that of the indi­vid­ual lan­guages. The new com­mon lan­guage will be more sim­ple and reg­u­lar than the exist­ing Euro­pean languages.

It will be as sim­ple as Occi­den­tal; in fact, it will be Occi­den­tal. To an Eng­lish per­son, it will seem like sim­pli­fied Eng­lish, as a skep­ti­cal Cam­bridge friend of mine told me what Occi­den­tal is. The Euro­pean lan­guages are mem­bers of the same fam­i­ly. Their sep­a­rate exis­tence is a myth. For sci­ence, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocab­u­lary. The lan­guages only dif­fer in their gram­mar, their pro­nun­ci­a­tion and their most com­mon words. Every­one real­izes why a new com­mon lan­guage would be desir­able: one could refuse to pay expen­sive trans­la­tors. To

The Euro­pean lan­guages are mem­bers of the same fam­i­ly. Their sep­a­rate exis­tence is a myth. For sci­ence, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocab­u­lary. The lan­guages only dif­fer in their gram­mar, their pro­nun­ci­a­tion and their most com­mon words. Every­one real­izes why a new com­mon lan­guage would be desir­able: one could refuse to pay expen­sive translators.

To achieve this, it would be nec­es­sary to have uni­form gram­mar, pro­nun­ci­a­tion and more com­mon words. If sev­er­al lan­guages coa­lesce, the gram­mar of the result­ing lan­guage is more sim­ple and reg­u­lar than that of the indi­vid­ual lan­guages. The new com­mon lan­guage will be more sim­ple and reg­u­lar than the exist­ing Euro­pean languages.

It will be as sim­ple as Occi­den­tal; in fact, it will be Occi­den­tal. To an Eng­lish per­son, it will seem like sim­pli­fied Eng­lish, as a skep­ti­cal Cam­bridge friend of mine told me what Occi­den­tal is. The Euro­pean lan­guages are mem­bers of the same fam­i­ly. Their sep­a­rate exis­tence is a myth. For sci­ence, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocab­u­lary. The lan­guages only dif­fer in their gram­mar, their pro­nun­ci­a­tion and their most com­mon words. Every­one real­izes why a new com­mon lan­guage would be desir­able: one could refuse to pay expen­sive trans­la­tors. To

The Euro­pean lan­guages are mem­bers of the same fam­i­ly. Their sep­a­rate exis­tence is a myth. For sci­ence, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocab­u­lary. The lan­guages only dif­fer in their gram­mar, their pro­nun­ci­a­tion and their most com­mon words. Every­one real­izes why a new com­mon lan­guage would be desir­able: one could refuse to pay expen­sive translators.

To achieve this, it would be nec­es­sary to have uni­form gram­mar, pro­nun­ci­a­tion and more com­mon words. If sev­er­al lan­guages coa­lesce, the gram­mar of the result­ing lan­guage is more sim­ple and reg­u­lar than that of the indi­vid­ual lan­guages. The new com­mon lan­guage will be more sim­ple and reg­u­lar than the exist­ing Euro­pean languages.

It will be as sim­ple as Occi­den­tal; in fact, it will be Occi­den­tal. To an Eng­lish per­son, it will seem like sim­pli­fied Eng­lish, as a skep­ti­cal Cam­bridge friend of mine told me what Occi­den­tal is. The Euro­pean lan­guages are mem­bers of the same fam­i­ly. Their sep­a­rate exis­tence is a myth. For sci­ence, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocab­u­lary. The lan­guages only dif­fer in their gram­mar, their pro­nun­ci­a­tion and their most com­mon words. Every­one real­izes why a new com­mon lan­guage would be desir­able: one could refuse to pay expen­sive trans­la­tors. To