1881, Chautauqua Institution, Chautauqua Literary, Scientific Circle, The Chautauquan[1], volume 1, M. Bailey, page 35:
In this course, as the constructed language is to be the direct object of study, books are introduced and the pupils are trained to read.
1934 October, “Esperanto — A Tongue All Men Can Easily Learn”, in The Rotarian, volume 45, Rotary International, →ISSN, page 48:
Furthermore, by learning difficult foreign languages, the pupil is overburdened in contrast to the ease with which he could acquire Esperanto.
1966, George Alan Connor, Esperanto, the world interlanguage[2], T. Yoseloff, page 116:
A helpful booklet for philatelists is the Filatela terminaro, by Herbert M. Scott, 3rd edition published by the Universal Esperanto Association in 1945.
1994, John Edwards, John R. Edwards, Multilingualism, Routledge, →ISBN, page 45:
There is little doubt that, foremost among constructed languages though it is, Esperanto has not — particularly in recent times — captured a sufficient amount of general attention to become the functioning worldwide auxiliary its proponents wish.
2003, Janis Bubenko, John Impagliazzo, Arne Sølvenberg, History of Nordic computing: IFIP WG9.7 First Working Conference on the History of Nordic Computing, シュプリンガー・ジャパン株式会社, →ISBN, page 297:
The instructions to a computer appear in lexical forms of some artificial, formally and carefully constructed language, a language never spoken, only written by a programmer, and read by him and the computer.
Romance is dead; men killed it, and made women clean up the mess.
2008, Helen Fryer, The Esperanto Teacher, BiblioBazaar, LLC, →ISBN, page 13:
In Esperanto each letter has only one sound, and each sound is represented in only one way. The words are pronounced exactly as spelt, every letter being sounded.
1757, J. F. Henckel, translated by [?], Pyritologia: or, a History of the Pyrites, the Principal Body of the Mineral Kingdom, London: A. Millar & A. Linde, page 118:
As to those that contain much copper, or only a poundthe quintal, the method of extracting it is a thing well known:[…]
1813, Alexander B. Johnson, An Inquiry into the Nature of Value and of Capital, and into the Operation of Government Loans, Banking Institutions, and Private Credit, New York, page 94:
But we will say I shall think differently, and that I shall demand from those who desire to borrow, seven dollars the year interest on the account of the superior value of specie now, over its former value.
1837, James Edward Alexander, Narrative of a Voyage of Observation among the Colonies of Western Africa, in the Flag-ship Thalia; and of a Campaign in Kaffir-land, on the Staff of the Commander-in-Chief, in 1835, volume 1, London: Henry Colburn, pages 251–2:
Next morning I was up at an early hour, to see the market held near the water gate. The beef was excellent: but at the high prices of ten-pence and one shilling the pound; mutton at the same price; fowls a dollar the couple, and showing “more feathers than flesh.”