Mirad Lexicon
Welcome to a bilingual lexicon of Mirad. Formerly known as Unilingua, Mirad is an artificially constructed auxiliary language (conlang) developed originally by Paris-based author Noubar Agopoff [1] as a serious medium for easy, regular, expressive, and logical international communication. This lexicon is a revision of the Agapoff's lexicon with over 80,000 word/expression pairings. It is a companion to the Mirad Grammar Wikibook.
- /Mirad-English-A
- /Mirad-English-B
- /Mirad-English-C
- /Mirad-English-D
- /Mirad-English-E
- /Mirad-English-F
- /Mirad-English-G
- /Mirad-English-H
- /Mirad-English-I
- /Mirad-English-J
- /Mirad-English-K
- /Mirad-English-L
- /Mirad-English-M
- /Mirad-English-N
- /Mirad-English-O
- /Mirad-English-P
- /Mirad-English-Q
- /Mirad-English-R
- /Mirad-English-S
- /Mirad-English-T
- /Mirad-English-U
- /Mirad-English-V
- /Mirad-English-W
- /Mirad-English-X
- /Mirad-English-Y
- /Mirad-English-Z
- /English-Mirad-A
- /English-Mirad-B
- /English-Mirad-C
- /English-Mirad-D
- /English-Mirad-E
- /English-Mirad-F
- /English-Mirad-G
- /English-Mirad-H
- /English-Mirad-I
- /English-Mirad-J
- /English-Mirad-K
- /English-Mirad-L
- /English-Mirad-M
- /English-Mirad-N
- /English-Mirad-O
- /English-Mirad-P
- /English-Mirad-Q
- /English-Mirad-R
- /English-Mirad-S
- /English-Mirad-T
- /English-Mirad-U
- /English-Mirad-V
- /English-Mirad-W
- /English-Mirad-X
- /English-Mirad-Y
- /English-Mirad-Z