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I quote this really just for interest. The OED arranges senses strictly historically, so one can't deduce from it that sense 1a is the normal one today. <font face="Gill Sans">[[Usor:Andrew Dalby|Andrew]]<font color="green">[[Disputatio Usoris:Andrew Dalby| Dalby]]</font></font> 12:59, 7 Aprilis 2010 (UTC)
 
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''OK. Still, I don't know if any of those earlier efforts were notable at the time Slovio was made. [...] [Usor:Pantocrator|Pantocrator]] 12:55, 7 Aprilis 2010 (UTC)''
:Some of them were, others weren't. But then, it depends what kind of standards you use for "notable". I think it's safe to say that most of the older projects are of historical importance only. In general, it should be said that most of the projects I listed are small one-man projects, too incomplete to be usable at all. I'm not too severe when it comes to notability requirements, but you'll agree that the line must be drawn somewhere, and that most of the projects listed wouldn't meet any of the requirements. In the case of Slovio, I think you can say that: a) it was probably the first Slavic auxlang published on the Internet; b) it is one of the bigger (= most complete) languages, perhaps even the biggest in terms of vocabulary; c) it is one of the very few projects of this type that has ever been used by more than one person; d) it has generated some media attention - not much, but enough to warrant inclusion; e) it is a well-known phenomenon among conlang enthousiasts and apparently quite a lot of people outside their realm have heard of it as well; f) it has indeed been the inspiration for a few similar projects (Slovianski is a bad example, but there are a few others, like Ruslavsk and Slovioski); g) there has been quite a lot of controversy about Slovio.
:BTW, it is true that Hučko claims that 400 mln. people can understand Slovio, but it is fairly obvious that this claim is false. In order to really understand Slovio, one needs to know Russian, because that's where the vast majority of the words are taken from. There's another page, also created by Hučko, where Slovio is in fact called "simplified Russian". [[Usor:IJzeren Jan|IJzeren Jan]] 13:54, 7 Aprilis 2010 (UTC)
Revertere ad "Lingua Slovio".