salam! Pandunia has finally reached version 1.0, which is a stable base for growth. (I must admit that we already made some corrections, so the current version is 1.0x...) The final structure of Pandunia is agglutinating. Here is a brief description of the basic morphology. - Nouns end in -e, -∅ (the null morpheme) or -ia (for abstract qualities, country names, etc). There is no other noun morphology, so things like gender, number and case are not marked but they are expressed with other means like separate words, word order or context. - Modifiers end in -i. A handful of most frequent modifiers are without the ending, for example both "bon" and "boni" can be used. It means both "good" and "well" because the class of modifiers covers both adjectives and adverbs. - Verbs end in -a (for "active voice" i.e. agent-verb-patient word order) and in -u (for "passive voice" i.e. patient-verb-agent word order). The verb endings make SVO, SOV and other word orders possible. There is no other verb morphology. Tense, mood and aspect are expressed with separate words. - Compound words use the linking vowel -o- or, if the second word begins with a vowel, the null morpheme -∅-. For example dem + kratia = demokratia (democracy); dew + iste = dewiste (theist). Pandunia is a worldlang. The vocabulary is borrowed from all parts of the world. The main sources are: 1. Western words, including Greek and Latin scientific terms. 2. Perso-Arabic words from the Islamic world. 3. Sinitic words from very populous China, Vietnam, Japan and Korea. 4. Indian words from the region of Indian Ocean. 5. Other sources, including a handful of "pan-African" words. One of my favorite words is "xir", which combines Perso-Arabic "shi'r" (including Turkish "şiir", Hebrew "šir", and Swahili "shairi") and Sinitic "shi" (including Mandarin "shī", Japanese "shi" and Korean "shi"). This word is probably more international than Western "poem" and using it avoids the embarrassing problem of choosing a single root, whether it should be poem-, poet- or poez-. We can derive more words by applying the final vowels and "suffixes": xir = poem; xiri = poetic; xira = to make a poem; xirer = poet; xiria = poetry. One unconventional feature is that only small letters (a.k.a. lower-case letters) are used in writing of Pandunia. It makes sense for a worldlang, which adopts words from different languages and scripts, most of which don't differentiate small and large letters. Details can be read at http://www.pandunia.info The website has been translated to Spanish, French, Polish, Russian, Esperanto and Finnish. The English version is the leading version. The other versions can be more or less incomplete and even partly outdated. Version history is stored in GitHub at https://github.com/barumau/pandunia Declaring 1.0 has raised a little more interest for Pandunia. Current member counts: - Facebook group "Pandunia" has 184 members. - Telegram channels: "pandunia" has 55 members, "pandunia esperanto grup" 59 members, "mome mon baxa pandunia" (where only Pandunia is spoken) 37 members. - Yahoo group and mailing list "Pandunia" has 37 members. It's the least active forum. Best regards, Risto Kupsala