Interglossa
| Interglossa | |
|---|---|
| Created by | Lancelot Hogben | 
| Date | 1943 | 
| Setting and usage | international auxiliary language | 
| Purpose | Constructed language
 
  | 
| Sources | Latin and Greek | 
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | igs | 
igs | |
| Glottolog | inte1261 | 
Interglossa (lit. "between + language") is a constructed language devised by biologist Lancelot Hogben during World War II, as an attempt to put the international lexicon of science and technology, mainly of Greek and Latin origin, into a language with a purely isolating grammar. Interglossa was published in 1943 as just a draft of an auxiliary. Hogben applied semantic principles to provide a reduced vocabulary of just over 880 words which might suffice for basic conversation among peoples of different nationality.
A descendant of Interglossa is Glosa (1970s–), which expanded and made changes to the words of the language.