Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching Esperanto grammar and vocabulary.
Questions & Answers about Mi vojaĝas al nova urbo.
Why does the sentence use al for "to"?
In Esperanto, al is the standard preposition expressing direction toward something. It is roughly equivalent to "to" in English. Whenever you're indicating movement or direction toward a place or object, you use al.
Why is there no article like "a" or "the" before nova urbo?
Esperanto typically doesn't use indefinite articles like "a," and although it has the definite article la, it is only used when referring to something specific. Here, you're simply saying "a new city" in a general sense, so no article is needed.
How do I know that vojaĝas means "I am traveling" and not "I travel"?
Esperanto has a single present tense form that covers both habitual actions ("I travel") and ongoing actions ("I am traveling"). Context tells you which meaning is intended. Because Mi vojaĝas is literally "I travel," it can also mean "I am traveling" when you need to express a current or ongoing action.
What's the difference between nova and nove?
Nova is an adjective meaning "new" that modifies nouns (like urbo). Nove is an adverb that means "in a new way" or "newly," modifying verbs. Since you're describing the city (a noun), you use the adjective form nova.
Why does urbo end in -o?
In Esperanto, all nouns end with -o in their basic form. This is a core rule of the language, making it easy to identify nouns. So urbo means "city," and the -o indicates it's a noun.
Your questions are stored by us to improve Elon.io
You've reached your AI usage limit
Sign up to increase your limit.