License

 Copyleft   2006 Carlos Quiles Casas

  2006 Dnghu, 2006 Europaio

All content on this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs2.5 License, unless otherwise expressly stated.

If you have no direct Internet connection, please read the Creative Commons license (summary) text from another computer online in http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ and the complete legal code in http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/legalcode.

To put it simple, you can redistribute this work for free, if you do not modify it (not even translate it) nor have benefits with its redistribution. You could, however, ask for payments for the copies you redistribute, not to loose your own money.

If you want to publish this work for commercial purposes, please contact the Dnghu group for business licenses.

If you have a special interest in translating this work to your language for educational or business purposes, please contact us.

We recommend you to download texts, books, software and any other work directly from, or request copies directly to, Dnghu's web site or official Dnghu's licensees, and always redirect to Dnghu's web site, if possible, for your users to download the latest, most stable releases.

Portions of this book are copied from the Public Domain book New Latin Grammar, Allen and Greenough,1903.

Some texts taken from the Dnghu's working groups and web sites may be included here and are licensed under a Dnghu General Open Academic Licence. They should have in this work an icon [© dgoal] near it.

Many pictures included in this work, as well as sections 1.2., 1.5. and 1.6. are released under the GNU Free Documentation License. All of them should have in this work an icon [© gfdl] near it.

Every image and section copied from other sources should have a [© link] which redirects to the license type (unless it is in the public domain, ) and another hyperlink to the original source's web site, usually placed on the images or on this sign near texts: [w]. Feel free to contact us to notice possible copyright and copyleft-licensing violations.

NOTE. It should be noticed, for those who are reading printed copies of this work, that most images (if not stated otherwise), and some texts on sections 1.2., 1.5, 1.6 are taken from the Wikipedia web site, at http://www.wikipedia.org/.

The dart photo of the front cover was taken by Oliver Delgado [w] and released to the public (with no usage restrictions) in the www.sxc.hu web site. The complete web site's license  can be read here. The whole front cover image, however, is released under the general Creative Commons License of this book.

The back-cover photo was taken from the EU Audiovisual Service, and its license (which essentially states that it is offered free of charge for EU-related information and education purposes) can be read here.

If you are about to redistribute commercial verbatim copies of this work, please read the conditions of all the above licences and remove those texts and images which are incompatible with a commercial reuse, specially those sections licensed under the Dnghu GOAL, the GNU FDL and the EU ASL licences.

For more detailed information and doubts, please contact the Dnghu group before doing anything, to avoid any future legal problems. We will try to answer your questions quickly and thoroughly.

NOTE. We don't use less restrictive licenses (such as the Dnghu General Open Academic Licence) for these specific extensive works because we firmly believe that to give the right to change everything in it to anyone would hinder the success of the European language - as many different projects would arise by only making some minor changes to whole texts, extending this way unnecessarily the efforts of the community and lessening our chances of success. We want, however, people to participate, so we rely on a license that gives enough freedom for the knowledge to be freely redistributed; but enough freedom for us, too, for this knowledge not to be distorted or ruined altogether by careless redistributors and rewriters. So, to sum up, if you want to experiment with creating new languages, don't copy our main works, make yours; and if you want to collaborate (wether criticizing us and changing things for better, or supporting us in any possible way), just contact (or join) us. You will be very welcome.