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There is a whole Wikipedia written in Basic English. This leads to the question if something similar exists for German. Maybe a type of controlled language for teaching aboriginals a simplified German at the time of colonialism?

What would be/was the basic vocabulary of this simplified German?

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2 Answers

up vote 13 down vote accepted

Around the years 1915-1916 there were plans for a constructed/planned German language called Weltdeutsch.

In the same years Oswald Salzmann created das "vereinfachte Deutsch" on the basis of standard German.

Also in 1915 Adalbert Baumann proposed a solution for the world language problem and named it Wede. Baumann was convinced that a universal auxiliary language was necessary. He critisized the previous solution attempts like Esperanto and suggested developing an artificial language based on a modern language (German or English).

The goal of these planned languages was to spread German language in the world, or at least in the German sphere of influence, especially in the colonies. The theoretical concepts never went realized though.

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would be cool if someone finds additionally a online source listing the basic vocabulary of this unrealized planned language! – Hauser Aug 6 '11 at 11:05
1  
So, the short answer seems to be: no, there isn't. – feeela Oct 21 '11 at 9:27

There are also some Pidgin-variants of German: Küchendeutsch/Namibian Black German (Namibia) and Unserdeutsch/Unserdeutsch_language (Papua New Guinea).

They are not really a controlled language, but at least Küchendeutsch seems to be a kind of simplified German.

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