Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
There are an estimated 20 Volapük speakers in the world today.
Volapük became less popular after 1887 when Esperanto was published.
But the idea did not catch on in large numbers until the language Volapük was created in 1879.
During the 1880s, the most popular international auxiliary language was undeniably Volapük.
Under his leadership, the Academy began to experiment more with the Volapük language.
He left the Volapük movement in 1895; after that time, he was never involved with universal languages.
In the elementary part, however, this problem has been overcome, because the relevant translation of each word appears below the Volapük words.
His enthusiastic activism in promoting Volapük is responsible for the majority of people who currently study and learn the language.
In May 1879 he published an article on Volapük in this magazine.
He is also an active member of the Volapük discussion group, which unites most living volapükologists.
It is also interesting to note that a mere forty years later, in 1879, Volapük took English for basis.
The following is the declension of the Volapük word vol "world":
The word 'Volapük' is also used in certain languages to mean "nonsense" and "gibberish".
The language Volapük itself quickly acquired support since it had appeared, both in Europe and America.
As a little boy, he writes, he often heard about Volapük, an earlier constructed language to which his father was somewhat sympathetic.
For a time, Pasilingua was regarded as a serious competition to Volapük, but never got much support.
The name Volapuk encoding comes from the constructed language Volapük, for two reasons.
A Volapük verb can be conjugated in 1,584 ways (including infinitives and reflexives).
A volapükologist is a person whose scientific interest is Volapük or who learns the language for hobby reasons.
The same stanza is available in further 13 languages, including Greek and Volapük, which are sung one after the other.
For the language, see Volapük.
Verheggen's language avoided some of the drawbacks of Volapük, but introduced various new problems.
Volapük announced their breakup in 2010.
This Third International Congress of Volapük took place in Paris.
One such ultimately disastrous case was Schleyer's Volapük.