Li dicas
ke me mustas askoltar
la kaudo di tigro
e sequar la piedi.
Quankam la sovaja bestio
havas ne dentegi,
Taiga es ne-predicebla.
Tamen li parolas tro
pro ke ol esas me,
qua esas en la foresto.
© Yelling Rosa
2026-01-17
English version of the poem below the drawing.

The Tail of the Tiger
They say
that I must listen to
The tail of the tiger
and follow the paws.
Even though the wild beast
has no tusks,
Taiga is unpredictable.
Yet they speak too much
because it is me,
That is in the forest.
© Yelling Rosa
2026-01-17
| Ido | The English Column is from Wiktionary. |
| Li | they, them |
| dicar | (tr.) to say, to tell |
| ke | that |
| me | I, me |
| mustar | (intr.) must, to have to, to be under the necessity of, be obliged |
| askoltar | (tr.) to listen to, hearken to, give ear to |
| kaudo | tail (appendage) |
| la | the |
| di | of (indicating possession) |
| tigro | tiger |
| e | apocopic form of ed |
| ed | and |
| sequar | (tr.) to follow, go or come after, go next, to be or come next |
| piedo | foot; paw |
| -i | -s; marks the plural form of nouns, by replacing the -o ending |
| quankam | although, though, albeit |
| sovaja | savage: wild |
| bestio | beast, animal (other than human) |
| havar | to have |
| -as | desinence of the present tense in verbs |
| ne | not, don’t; |
| ne- | (“non-, un-, in-, im-, ir- (etc.)”) |
| dentego | augmentative of dento; tusk |
| Taiga | Taiga or tayga (/ˈtaɪɡə/ TY-gə; Russian: тайга́, IPA: [tɐjˈɡa]), also known as boreal forest or snow forest, is a biome characterized by coniferous forests consisting mostly of pines, spruces, and larches, Wikipedia. |
| es | apocopic form of esas |
| esar (present esas) | (intr.) to be |
| ne-predicebla | unpredictable |
| -ebla | -able, -ible |
| tamen | however, nevertheless |
| parolar | to talk; to speak |
| tro | too (much) |
| multe | a lot |
| pro ke | because |
| ol | apocopic form of olu; it, that |
| qua | (relative pronoun) which, who |
| en | in |
| foresto | forest |
| © Yelling Rosa | © Wiktionary |
Ido
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ido (/ˈiːdoʊ/[2]) is a constructed language derived from a reformed version of Esperanto, and designed similarly with the goal of being a international auxiliary language (or universal second language) for people of diverse languages. Read the rest of the article here.
















