Etymology The name "" means "logical language". It is a
compound formed from and , which are short forms of (logic) and (language), respectively. In Lojban, a compound is called a and short forms like those (used especially to form compounds) are called .
Origins from Loglan Lojban's predecessor,
Loglan, a language invented by
James Cooke Brown in 1955 and later developed by The Loglan Institute, was originally conceived as a means to examine the influence of language on the speaker's thought (an assumption known as
linguistic relativism). As Brown started to claim his
copyright on the language's components, bans were put on the language community's activities to stop changes to aspects of the language. In order to circumvent such control, a group of Loglan users decided to initiate a separate project, departing from the lexical basis of Loglan and reinventing the whole vocabulary, which led to the current lexicon of Lojban. To this effect, they established the Logical Language Group in 1987, based in
Washington, D.C. They also won a trial over whether they could call their version of the language Loglan.
Divergence from Loglan The phonetic form of Lojban (root words) was created algorithmically by searching for sound patterns in words with similar meanings in world languages and by weighting those sound patterns by the number of speakers of those languages. The list of source languages used for the algorithm was limited to the six
most widely spoken languages as of 1987, namely
Mandarin,
English,
Hindi,
Spanish,
Russian, and
Arabic. This resulted in root words being, in their phonetic form, a relatively equal mixture of English and Mandarin, with lesser influences from the other four. Lojban also utilizes a set of
evidential indicators adapted from the constructed language
Láadan. Following the publication of
The Complete Lojban Language, it was expected that the documented lexicon would be baselined, and the combination of lexicon and reference grammar would be frozen for a minimum of five years while language usage grew. As scheduled, this period, which has officially been called the freeze, expired in 2002. The speakers of Lojban are now free to construct new words and idioms, and decide where the language is heading.
Contributors Below are some of the notable personalities who have contributed to the development of Lojban: •
Bob LeChevalier (also known as ): the founder and the President of the LLG. •
Robin Lee Powell (also known as ): the author of a novel-sized story, (
Night Walkers). •
Jorge Llambías (also known as ): one of the most active Lojbanists, having done several translations. He is also a prominent figure on the mailing list, helping beginners with the language. •
John W. Cowan: the author of
The Complete Lojban Language. •
Miles Forster (also known as ): a German Lojbanist who wrote the song
ca pa djedi and made several large translations into Lojban. • Robin Turner: a British philosopher and linguist living in Turkey, and coauthor of
Lojban For Beginners. •
Nick Nicholas (also known as
la nitcion): an Australian linguist, and coauthor of
Lojban For Beginners.
Learning resources Apart from the actual practice of the language, some members of the community and LLG have been endeavoring to create various aids for the learners.
The Complete Lojban Language (
CLL, also known as
The Red Book because of its color, and
The Codex Woldemar, after its author), the definitive word on all aspects of Lojban, is one of them, finalized in 1997. Some of the projects in varying stages of completeness are: • Different textbooks, presentations to help learn Lojban • la muplis, an application listing Lojban sentences from the
Tatoeba database with their translation to other languages • Parser: (also includes experimental grammar), (by Robin Lee Powell and Jorge Llambías), (by Richard Curnow) • Database: (initial version by Jay Kominek) Lojban's learning resources on the internet are available mainly to speakers of English, French, Spanish, Russian, Hebrew, and Esperanto, to varying degrees. ==Applications==