sal, dunia! – Hello, world!
Welcome to learn about Pandunia, the helping language for international interaction and friendship.
Image designed by Freepik
Pandunia is a simple language that helps people to talk with each other when they don’t have any other language in common.
All words in Pandunia are international. The basic words are similar to English and the rest come from other important languages, including French, Spanish, Japanese, Chinese, Russian, Arabic, Hindi and Swahili.
Pandunia is compatible with English on a basic level. So you can use Pandunia already now everywhere in the world where English is understood to get a hotel room, to order a taxi, to buy souvenirs and to do many other things.
Pandunia is regular and simple. Therefore it can be learned much easier and faster than English and other national languages. There aren’t any grammatical exceptions or complex rules in Pandunia. Pandunia is so simple that its basic grammar can be described in only ten rules. Everybody can learn Pandunia to a good level in a short period of time! Pandunia would be an excellent choice for the global second language because it can improve the quality of international communication. It’s better to speak good Pandunia than bad English.
Pandunia is written in the Latin (and English!) alphabet:
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V X Y Z
Only two letters are pronounced differently than normally in English: c = ch as in church, and x = sh as in ship.
All vowels are pure vowels. They are pronounced as in are there three or two.
The spelling of Pandunia is nearly phonetic. One sound = one letter.
The stress is on that syllable that is before the last consonant of the root word.
Prefixes and suffixes are either unstressed or they may carry a secondary stress.
múlti hóm kán báxe pandúnia.
– Many people can speak Pandunia.
Words stay always the same in Pandunia. There aren’t any special inflected forms for cases, tenses, moods, singular and plural etc.
The normal word order is subject–verb–object
so the doer comes first, then the action word and finally the object of the action.
mi ame tu.
– I love you.
The word order is the same also in questions.
tu ame ke?
– Who do you love?
tu ame mi, he?
– Do you love me? (i.e. Do you love, eh?)
Singular and plural are indicated with number words.
buk
– one or more books
un buk
– (one) book
du buk
– two books
tri buk
– three books
multi buk
– many books
Comparison is done with helping words: max – more; min – less; ka – than; and sim – as, same, equally.
mi es max bon ka tu.
– I am better (more good) than you.
no, tu es sim bon ka mi.
– No, you are as good as me.
da logu max rapid ka tu.
– He or she talks faster (more fast) than you.
Time is expressed with auxiliary verbs:
pas
– past events
vil
– future events
hav
– past events that are still relevant
zai
– ongoing events
damen pas lese mi su buk.
– They read my book.
mimen hav lese multi buk.
– We have read many books.
mi zai lese un buk.
– I am reading one book.
tu vil baxe Pandunia.
– You will talk Pandunia.
Sentence-final particles express why the sentence is said,
i.e. is the sentence, for example, a statement, a question or a command.
tu ame kafe, he?
– You love coffee, eh? (question)
tu ame kafe, ya.
– You love coffee, indeed. (statement)
tu ame kafe, ne?
– You love coffee, don’t you? (need for response)
As you can see, it’s easy for everyone to learn the basics of Pandunia, and it’s even easier for those who speak some English! It’s also easy to start using the language immediately. So don’t wait! Use it with your friends in everyday life or try it with strangers when you are traveling. It works!
You can find other Pandunia speakers in the internet in following forums.
Find Pandunia speakers near you in Amikumu app!
Image designed by Freepik
You can contact the creator and a main developer of Pandunia, Risto Kupsala, via email risto@pandunia.info and in the aforementioned forums.
ze hol dunia, do hol dunia
– from the whole world, for the whole world