02/5/2006
Proto-Indo-European language revival projects are supported mainly by the work and collaboration of many
of our learners and readers (learn what
To Do Now),
whose aim is to help Indo-European become a spoken and renowned language, and
hopefully EU's main official language in the long-term.
We appeal to international collaboration by supporting redistribution of free knowledge
through our publications and resources, while aiming at the practical and complete
reconstruction of a modern, usable Indo-European language
to facilitate intranational and international communication.
Indo-European language projects:
There are currently four active specialized projects,
in which anyone may collaborate freely.
You can become an active member of the meritocracy which governs
the Gateway to the European Language,
indo-european.eu,and
the collaborative news website
europaios.com. The
wrdhom.org site is designed
for Indo-European vocabulary development.
If you are a member of a public or private institution and you think it would be interested in
joining the Dnghu Network, you could be among those who decide the future definitive shape
of the Modern Indo-European grammar and vocabulary. Final decisions and recommendations
will be posted by experts on
Europaiom Komsortiom web site,
while discussions will be held on a private wiki, both projects being directed and
administered by Dnghu and its main partners.
If you are a software developer, we are currently developing the online
WLQO translator/dictionary at
SourceForge; based on
the Open Translation Engine (OTE), it is released under the
GNU General Public License
- unlike good old OTE, which had a BSD-like licence and whose source code was not always
publicly released. The Indo-European language dictionaries in
XML (and also in DICT format) will be licensed under
a W3C-like license, the
DNGHU Likentia.