Citations:Ceqli


 * 2003, N Olsen, Marketing an International Auxiliary Language: Challenges to a New Artificial:
 * [In] 1987, they started their own group, The Logical Language Group, and launched Lojban, which is conceptually similar to Loglan, although the vocabulary is different due to legal and copyright issues (Keith 1998). Other Loglan “daughter” languages include Voksigid and Ceqli.
 * 2008, R Cheyne, Created languages in science fiction, in Science Fiction Studies:
 * Loglan and the others that followed, including Lojban, Lojsk, and Ceqli, are generally structured in such a way as to minimize ambiguity; they tend to have regular grammatical structures and phonetic spelling systems.
 * 2012, 심재헌 (author), 포아송 위계선형모형을 활용한 인구이동 실증분석 (An Empirical Analysis of Inter-regional Migration Using a Poisson Hierarchical Generalized Linear Model):
 * The self-segregating morphology is influenced by Loglan and its step-child Lojban. He then cites the artificial language Ladekwa as “a major influence,” and brings up another artificial language, Ceqli, so it may have contributed to his ideas for Konya.


 * 2003-2005, E Burr, Multilingualism and the Web in Computers, literature and philology, CLIP 2003, 2005:
 * Notwithstanding the fact that on The Linguist List Europanto is seen to be closely related with mixed (artificial) languages like Esperanto, Interlingua, Brithenig, Ceqli, Klingon, Lojban, Orcish, Ido, Quenya, Sindarin, Volapük, Jakelimotu