Reta Vortaro

Reta Vortaro

Page from ReVo shows “TTT” ("W3")
and several related words.
Type of site
multilingual online dictionary
Available in Esperanto
Created by Wolfram Diestel
Website reta-vortaro.de/revo/
Commercial no
Registration only required to make edits
Launched end of 1997
Current status active
Content licence
GPL[1]

Reta Vortaro ("Internet Dictionary", often known by the Esperanto short form ReVo) is a general-purpose multilingual Esperanto dictionary for the Internet. Each of the dictionary's headwords is defined in Esperanto, along with additional information, such as example sentences, to help distinguish the subtle shades of meaning that each particular word form may have.

Headwords also have translation equivalents in various national languages. Over 70 percent of the headwords have French, Russian, Hungarian and/or German translations; over half the words have Dutch, Belarusian and/or English translations; and over a third of the words have Polish, Portuguese, Spanish and/or Catalan translations.

Italian, Swedish, Breton, Persian, Bulgarian and several other languages are also represented, though with smaller numbers of Esperanto headwords.[2] In addition to indices of headwords linking to the various national languages represented, Reta Vortaro also has multiple thematic indexes, a thesaurus and a bibliography of sources consulted.

History

The project was initiated at the end of 1997. The original purpose had been to create an electronic version of the massive dictionary known as Plena Ilustrita Vortaro de Esperanto (1970 and 2002 editions), but due to a lack of interest on the part of the PIV editors, at least partly due to concerns over harming sales of the printed volume, the project changed its focus to creating a separate Internet-use dictionary. One of its major sources is the Plena Vortaro de Esperanto (1930, with the 1953 supplement of Gaston Waringhien).

Crowd-sourced editing

Contributions are added through an e-mail editing server, for which anyone can register. Lexical items are formulated in XML. Editorial discussion takes place via the mailing list. The content and the tools are licensed through the GNU General Public License (GPL).

The many differences between definitions and translations provided by the PIV and by ReVo are clarified by an understanding of various "language policies". While the PIV tries to create a complete dictionary by proposing Esperanto terminology for previously missing words in general usage and even to try to prescribe and correct de facto language use through its definitions, the purpose of ReVo is to record and describe Esperanto as it is actually used. ReVo demands that volunteer editors provide two or more sources for a newly cited word, at least one of which is not from a dictionary.

Evolution of Reta Vortaro

Various "snapshots" of ReVo's development have been taken over time.

In addition, various thematic dictionaries had large collections of words, with mathematics at 1,262; zoology at 1,088; botany at 1008; geography at 907; medicine and pharmacy at 774; economics, finance and commerce at 740, music at 465; computer science at 447, etc.[2]

Examples

One who knows the Esperanto root-form of a word (for nouns, this is the word without the -o ending; for adjectives, the word without the -a ending) can look up a web page giving the Esperanto word's meanings, along with related words and example sentences.

Notes

  1. GPL licence terms for Reta Vortaro. Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Statistiko. Accessed 18 November 2012.
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