all pages are in presentable form, hopefully

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/dev/urandom 2020-04-03 00:02:36 +03:00
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@ -18,6 +18,15 @@ Unlike English, every vowel uses the same sound in all words. If you know how
to pronounce the vowel sounds in Spanish, Japanese or Esperanto, then you can
pronounce them the same way in toki pona.
> %info%
> The "International Phonetic Alphabet" (IPA) is a common way to write
> down specific pronunciations of words and phrases in any language.
>
> It uses a version of the Latin alphabet with lots of additional characters
> added. For example, the IPA pronunciation of the English word "language" is
> /ˈlæŋɡwɪd͡ʒ/, but in toki pona, every single letter's pronunciation _is_ its
> IPA symbol! So "toki pona" is pronounced /toki pona/.
For examples of English words with corresponding pronunciations:
* **a** sounds like the "u" in the word "up" or (in some variants of English)
@ -31,8 +40,11 @@ For examples of English words with corresponding pronunciations:
* **u** sounds like the "oo" in "oops" or "moon".
Since there are so few sounds, different speakers may pronounce it with some
differences. For example, some might substitute the sounds "p,t,k" with "b,d,g".
Since there are so few sounds, the way they can be pronounced can be very
flexible. For example, some might substitute the sounds "p,t,k" with "b,d,g".
Such a shift would cause a lot of ambiguity or confusion in other languages, but
toki pona's sounds were chosen to be easy to distinguish, regardless of one's
native tongue.
All toki pona words are pronounced with stress on their first syllable.
@ -52,4 +64,4 @@ English words:
| tu | two |
| wan | one |
[Next page](1.html)
[Top page](index.html) [Next page](1.html)

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@ -4,18 +4,18 @@
The vocabulary for this page:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|-------|---------------------------------|------------------------------|
| mi | i, me, us | Esperanto "mi" (I, me) |
| sina | you | Finnish "sinä" (you) |
| ona | he, she, they, it | Serbo-Croatian "ona" (she) |
| li | (between subj. and verb/adj.) | Esperanto "li" (he) |
| pona | good, simple, to improve, to fix| Esperanto "bona" (good) |
| ike | bad, evil, complex, unnecessary | Finnish "ilkeä" (bad) |
| suli | big, great, important, to grow | Finnish "suuri" (big, great) |
| lili | small, few, young, to shrink | Tok Pisin "liklik" (small) |
| kili | fruit, vegetable, mushroom | Georgian "xili" (fruit) |
| soweli| land mammal, animal | Georgian "cxoveli" (beastly animal)|
| word | meaning |
|-------|---------------------------------|
| mi | i, me, us |
| sina | you |
| ona | he, she, they, it |
| li | (between subj. and verb/adj.) |
| pona | good, simple, to improve, to fix|
| ike | bad, evil, complex, unnecessary |
| suli | big, great, important, to grow |
| lili | small, few, young, to shrink |
| kili | fruit, vegetable, mushroom |
| soweli| land mammal, animal |
Let's start with the most basic sentence structure in toki pona:
@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ usage, both "ona" and "suli" will be more clear based on context.
And in this case, it doesn't make a lot of sense to use any meaning of "pona"
other than "good".
There is one exception to the rule. If the subject is "mi" or "sina", then it is
There is an exception to the rule. If the subject is "mi" or "sina", then it is
not necessary to add the word "li". So, instead of
> sina li suli. - You are important.
@ -69,4 +69,4 @@ Now, how would you express the following ideas?
> * ona li soweli.
> * sina ike.
[Next page](2.html) [Previous page](0.html)
[Previous page](0.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](2.html)

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@ -4,23 +4,23 @@
The vocabulary for this page -- pre-verbs:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|-------|----------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| kama | coming, future, event | Tok Pisin "kamap" (event, become)|
| ken | can, ability, possibility | Tok Pisin "ken", English "can" |
| open | start, begin, open | English "open" |
| pini | end, finish, close | French "fini", Tok Pisin "pinis" |
| sona | knowledge, to know (how to) | Georgian "codna" (knowledge) |
| wile | want, need, desire | Dutch "willen" (want, desire) |
| word | meaning |
|-------|----------------------------------|
| kama | coming, future, event |
| ken | can, ability, possibility |
| open | start, begin, open |
| pini | end, finish, close |
| sona | knowledge, to know (how to) |
| wile | want, need, desire |
and regular words:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|-------|----------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| lupa | hole, door, window | Lojban "clupa" (loop) |
| nasin | path, road, directive, way | Serbo-Croatian "način" (method) |
| nena | hill, mountain, button, bump,nose| Finnish "nenä" (nose) |
| tenpo | time, moment | Esperanto "tempo" (time) |
| word | meaning |
|-------|----------------------------------|
| lupa | hole, door, window |
| nasin | path, road, directive, way |
| nena | hill, mountain, button, bump,nose|
| tenpo | time, moment |
## Pre-verbs
@ -69,11 +69,12 @@ When "kama" is added before "sona", you get a phrase that means "to learn":
> mi kama sona toki kepeken toki pona. -- I am learning how to speak toki pona.
The word "wile" is used to express want or need for the following action.
The word "wile" is used to express want or need for the following action or
thing.
> jan lili li wile moku. -- The child (is hungry / wants to eat).
> jan lili li wile e ijo musi. The child wants a toy (amusing thing).
> jan lili li wile e ijo musi. The child wants a toy ("amusing thing").
> wile sina li suli mute. -- Your needs/desires are very big.
@ -138,4 +139,4 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
> * sina kute ala e jan sona la pali sina li ike.
> * tenpo mute la mi pali e ni. / mi pali e ni lon tenpo mute.
[Next page](11.html) [Previous page](9.html)
[Previous page](9.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](11.html)

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@ -4,18 +4,18 @@
The vocabulary for this page:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|-------|----------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| wan | one, part (of smth), united | English "one" |
| tu | two, divide, divided | English "two" |
| sike | circle, round, ball, year | English "circle" |
| mani | money, large domesticated animal | English "money" |
| esun | trade, market, shop, exchange | unknown |
| mun | moon, star | English "moon" |
| nanpa | number, (ordinal indicator) | Tok Pisin "namba" (number) |
| poki | box, container, bowl, cup, drawer| Tok Pisin "bokis" (box) |
| sin | new, additional, fresh, extra | Mandarin "xīn" (new, fresh) |
| suno | sun, light, brightness, shine | Esperanto "suno" (sun) |
| word | meaning |
|-------|----------------------------------|
| wan | one, part (of smth), united |
| tu | two, divide, divided |
| sike | circle, round, ball, year |
| mani | money, large domesticated animal |
| esun | trade, market, shop, exchange |
| mun | moon, star |
| nanpa | number, (ordinal indicator) |
| poki | box, container, bowl, cup, drawer|
| sin | new, additional, fresh, extra |
| suno | sun, light, brightness, shine |
## Numerals
@ -24,7 +24,8 @@ The most basic numerals in toki pona are these words:
* ala - 0, nothing
* wan - 1
* tu - 2
* mute - 3 or more
* mute (many) - 3 or more
* ale (all) - everything, endless
This is, quite obviously, a very limited system. But it is not unique to toki
pona: languages from some hunter-gatherer societies stop their numerals at
@ -90,39 +91,68 @@ used to describe periods of time:
> tenpo sike -- year ("circle time").
## Weather
When talking about weather, the commonly used sentence is "[noun] li lon", which
literally means "[noun] exists" and translates to "It is [noun]y". Examples:
> suno li lon. -- It is sunny.
> telo sewi li lon. -- It is rainy. ("Sky water" exists.)
> seli li lon. -- It is warm.
> lete li lon. -- It is cold.
## Dialectal differences
> %info%
> This part of the document describes how certain toki pona courses differ in
> explaining certain ideas, or how communities differ in using them.
The official book and the "o kama sona e toki pona!" course differ on how to use
ordinal numbers. The former suggests simply adding "nanpa", followed by
the number, while the latter proposes adding "pi nanpa" and the number.
> jan nanpa wan -- first person
> jan pi nanpa wan -- first person
In the community, the former way seems slightly more widespread, so this course
will follow its example.
## Exercises
Now, try to figure out the meaning of these sentences.
* mi wile esun e soweli suli tu wan ni.
*
* tenpo suno pini la mi lon tomo sona.
* tenpo mun wan pini la lete li lon.
* sina pona nanpa wan tawa mi.
*
* tenpo suno mute mute la telo sewi li awen.
And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
* I live in house #27 on Washington Street.
*
*
*
*
* The TV ("device of moving pictures") said tomorrow will be sunny.
* It will be cold tonight.
* May ("the 5th month") is lovely.
* You have a lot of musical instruments!
<a name="answers" href="#answers" onclick="revealSpoilers();">Reveal answers</a>
> %spoiler%
> * I would like to trade these three large animals.
> *
> * Yesterday, I was in school/college/university ("house of knowledge").
> * One month ago, it was cold.
> * I like you the most.
> *
> * The rain continued for 40 days.
> %spoiler%
> * mi lon tomo nanpa mute luka tu pi nasin Wasintan.
> *
> *
> *
> *
[Next page](12.html) [Previous page](10.html)
> * ilo pi sitelen tawa li toki e ni: tenpo suno kama la suno li lon.
> * tenpo pimeja la lete li lon.
> * (tenpo mun / tenpo sike mun) nanpa luka li (pona / suwi).
> * sina jo e ijo mute pi kalama musi a!
[Previous page](10.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](12.html)

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pages/tokipona/12.md Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,77 @@
% toki pona page 11 - the final countdown
% /dev/urandom
% april 2020
The vocabulary for this page:
| word | meaning |
|-------|----------------------------------|
| akesi | "non-cute" animal, lizard |
| alasa | to hunt, to gather |
| kon | air, essence, spirit, ephemeral |
| pan | bread, grain, corn, rice, pizza |
| pilin | heart, feeling, touch, sense |
| pu | the official toki pona book, interacting with it |
| supa | horizontal surface |
| taso | but, however, only |
| uta | mouth, lips |
| weka | absent, away, remote, get rid of |
These are the final 10 official words in toki pona. They all function in the
same way as other words mentioned before, with one exception.
## taso
The word "taso" can be used as a regular adjective to mean "only" or "just":
> mi li lon tomo ni. -- I'm in this house.
> mi taso li lon tomo ni. -- Only I'm in this house.
> kulupu ona li jo e jan tu taso. -- Their community only has two people.
> mi pali taso. -- I was only working.
But, when added at the beginning of a sentence, it means "but" or "however":
> taso, tenpo kama li wile ala ante. -- But, the future refused to change.
## Exercises
Now, try to figure out the meaning of these sentences.
* sina wile kama sona e toki pona la pu li nasin pona nanpa wan tawa ni.
* tenpo suno ni la mi pilin pona mute.
* sina wile ala wile moku e pan sike?
* supa lape mi li pakala. mi ken ala lape tan ni.
* jan Mali Konto li toki e ni: o weka e ijo ike sina.
* kulupu ijo tu wan li lon. ona li kulupu kiwen, li kulupu telo, li kulupu kon.
* taso, meli lili pi jan lawa li lon tomo awen ante.
And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
* I saw a dragon ("big green fire lizard")!
* Hello! How are you? ("How do you feel?")
* The hunter gave us lots of meat and fruit.
* I'm reading a document. Very soon, it will end.
* I can speak toki pona very well.
<a name="answers" href="#answers" onclick="revealSpoilers();">Reveal answers</a>
> %spoiler%
> * If you want to learn toki pona, the official book is the best way to do so.
> * Today I feel very good.
> * Would you want to eat some pizza?
> * My bed ("sleeping surface") is broken. I can't sleep because of it.
> * Marie Kondo says: get rid of unnecessary things.
> * There are three types of matter. These are: solids, liquids and gases.
> * But the princess is in another castle.
> %spoiler%
> * mi lukin e akesi seli laso suli a!
> * toki! sina pilin seme?
> * jan alasa li pana e moku soweli mute e kili mute tawa mi mute.
> * mi lukin e lipu. tenpo lili la ona li pini.
> * mi ken toki pona mute kepeken toki pona.
[Previous page](11.html) [Top page](index.html)

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@ -4,18 +4,18 @@
The vocabulary for this page:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|---------|----------------------------------|-------------------------------|
| ala | no, not, zero | Georgian "ara" (no) |
| ale/ali | all, everything, universe | Dutch "alle" (all) |
| utala | fight, battle, challenge | Serbo-Croatian "udarati" (hit)|
| wawa | strong, powerful | Finnish "vahva" (strong) |
| suwi | sweet, cute, adorable | Tok Pisin "suwi" (sweet) |
| jan | person, people, humanity | Cantonese "jan" (person) |
| mama | parent, ancestor, creator, origin| Georgian "mama" (father) |
| meli | woman, female, feminine, wife | Tok Pisin "meri" (woman, wife)|
| mije | man, male, masculine | Finnish "mies" (man, husband) |
| moku | food, to eat | Japanese "mogumogu" (munching)|
| word | meaning |
|---------|----------------------------------|
| ala | no, not, zero |
| ale/ali | all, everything, universe |
| utala | fight, battle, challenge |
| wawa | strong, powerful |
| suwi | sweet, cute, adorable |
| jan | person, people, humanity |
| mama | parent, ancestor, creator, origin|
| meli | woman, female, feminine, wife |
| mije | man, male, masculine |
| moku | food, to eat |
To define subjects and adjectives more clearly, you can add extra words as
adjectives. In toki pona, an adjective that modifies a noun stands after the
@ -83,4 +83,4 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
> * jan lili mije sina li wawa.
> * kili lili li suwi.
[Next page](3.html) [Previous page](1.html)
[Previous page](1.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](3.html)

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@ -4,18 +4,18 @@
The vocabulary for this page:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|-------|----------------------------------|-----------------------------------|
| e | (specifies an object) | unknown origin |
| ijo | thing, object | Esperanto "io" (something) |
| ilo | tool, machine, device | Esperanto "ilo" (tool) |
| lipu | book, document, paper | Finnish "lippu" (flag, banner) |
| lukin | eye, to look, to see, to seek to | Tok Pisin "lukim" (see, look at) |
| olin | love, compassion, affection | Serbo-Croatian "volim" (I love) |
| pali | to do, to work, to make, labor | Esperanto "fari" (do, make) |
| pana | to give, to send, to emit | Finnish "panna" (put, set, place) |
| telo | water, fluid, to water, to clean | Acadian French "de l'eau" (water) |
| tomo | home, room, structure | Esperanto "domo" (house) |
| word | meaning |
|-------|----------------------------------|
| e | (specifies an object) |
| ijo | thing, object |
| ilo | tool, machine, device |
| lipu | book, document, paper |
| lukin | eye, to look, to see, to seek to |
| olin | love, compassion, affection |
| pali | to do, to work, to make, labor |
| pana | to give, to send, to emit |
| telo | water, fluid, to water, to clean |
| tomo | home, room, structure |
To add a verb to the sentence, use the following structure:
@ -98,4 +98,4 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
> * jan utala ike li lukin e tomo sina.
> * ilo mi li pali pona.
[Next page](4.html) [Previous page](2.html)
[Previous page](2.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](4.html)

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@ -4,18 +4,18 @@
The vocabulary for this page:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|---------|----------------------------------|--------------------------------|
| jo | to have/carry/contain/hold | Mandarin "yǒu" (have) |
| kala | fish, marine animal, sea creature| Finnish "kala" (fish) |
| kasi | plant, grass, herb, leaf | Finnish "kasvi" (plant) |
| pipi | insect, bug | Acadian French "bibitte" (bug) |
| sitelen | symbol, image, writing, to draw | Dutch "schilderen" (paint) |
| toki | speech, to talk, language | Tok Pisin "tok" (talk) |
| waso | bird, flying creature | French "oiseau" (bird) |
| ma | earth, land, outdoors, territory | Finnish "maa" (earth/land) |
| kiwen | hard object, metal, stone, solid | Finnish "kiven" (of a stone) |
| ko | powder, clay, semi-solid | Cantonese "gou" (cream/paste) |
| word | meaning |
|---------|----------------------------------|
| jo | to have/carry/contain/hold |
| kala | fish, marine animal, sea creature|
| kasi | plant, grass, herb, leaf |
| pipi | insect, bug |
| sitelen | symbol, image, writing, to draw |
| toki | speech, to talk, language |
| waso | bird, flying creature |
| ma | earth, land, outdoors, territory |
| kiwen | hard object, metal, stone, solid |
| ko | powder, clay, semi-solid |
This page will only cover the ten new words and a few small concepts.
@ -48,6 +48,12 @@ particles "li" or "e" followed by their verbs or objects.
> jan pali li pona e ilo, li lukin e lipu. - A worker fixes the device and looks
> at (reads) a document.
## Phrases
The word "toki", when used by itself, is a common greeting:
> toki! -- Hello!
## Dialectal differences
> %info%
@ -99,5 +105,4 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
> * sitelen sina li pona lukin.
> * jan pona mi li jo e kala e kili li pali e moku pona.
[Next page](5.html) [Previous page](3.html)
[Previous page](3.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](5.html)

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@ -4,18 +4,18 @@
The vocabulary for this page:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|---------|---------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| ante | different, changed, to change | Dutch "ander" (other, different) |
| awen | keep, stay, endure, protect | Dutch "houden" (keep, care for) |
| en | and (combines subjects) | Dutch "en" (and) |
| kalama | sound, noise, to read/make sound| Serbo-Croatian "galama" (noise) |
| kulupu | group, community, society | Tongan "kulupu" (from "group") |
| lape | sleep, rest | Dutch "slapen" (sleep) |
| mute | many, more, quantity | Esperanto "multe" (a lot) |
| ni | this, that | Cantonese "ni" (this) |
| pakala | break, mistake, (generic curse) | Tok Pisin "bagarap" (accident) |
| seli | heat, warmth, chemical reaction | Georgian "cxeli" (hot) |
| word | meaning |
|---------|---------------------------------|
| ante | different, changed, to change |
| awen | keep, stay, endure, protect |
| en | and (combines subjects) |
| kalama | sound, noise, to read/make sound|
| kulupu | group, community, society |
| lape | sleep, rest |
| mute | many, more, quantity |
| ni | this, that |
| pakala | break, mistake, (generic curse) |
| seli | heat, warmth, chemical reaction |
Before we discover a whole new type of words and new grammar, let's fill in some
blanks.
@ -95,5 +95,4 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
> * sina ante lukin.
> * tomo ni li awen e seli.
[Next page](6.html) [Previous page](4.html)
[Previous page](4.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](6.html)

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@ -4,31 +4,31 @@
The vocabulary for this page will be divided into two groups. Prepositions:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|---------|---------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| kepeken | to use, using, with the help of | Dutch "gebruiken" (to use) |
| lon | in, at, on, true, present, exist| Tok Pisin "long" (at, in, on) |
| sama | same as, similar, like, sibling | Esperanto/Finnish "sama" (same) |
| tan | from, because of, cause, reason | Cantonese "tsung" (from) |
| tawa | to, for, moving, from persp. of | English "towards" |
| word | meaning |
|---------|---------------------------------|
| kepeken | to use, using, with the help of |
| lon | in, at, on, true, present, exist|
| sama | same as, similar, like, sibling |
| tan | from, because of, cause, reason |
| tawa | to, for, moving, from persp. of |
And regular words (which in this case all relate to locations):
| word | meaning | derived from |
|---------|---------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| sewi | up, above, sky, divine, sacred | Georgian "zevit" (upwards) |
| noka | foot, leg, bottom, under | Serbo-Croatian "noga" (foot/leg) |
| poka | hip, side, next to, nearby | Serbo-Croatian "boka" (of side) |
| monsi | back, behind, rear, butt | Acadian French "mon tchu" |
| sinpin | face, foremost, front, wall | Cantonese "tsin bin" (in front) |
| word | meaning |
|---------|---------------------------------|
| sewi | up, above, sky, divine, sacred |
| noka | foot, leg, bottom, under |
| poka | hip, side, next to, nearby |
| monsi | back, behind, rear, butt |
| sinpin | face, foremost, front, wall |
Prepositions are words that are attacked to other parts of the sentence in order
to express a place or time (more on that in the future) or a specific detail
about the action.
In toki pona, the words "kepeken", "lon", "sama", "tan" and "tawa" can be
prepositions -- in which case they're added at the end of the sentence without
any extra particles -- or as regular words with related meanings.
In toki pona, the words "kepeken", "lon", "sama", "tan" and "tawa" are used as
prepositions, by being added at the end of the sentence without any extra
particles.
Here are some examples of all five of these words, both as prepositions and as
regular words:
@ -58,6 +58,8 @@ regular words:
> mi tawa tan tomo mi. -- I am leaving my house.
> ona li awen lon tomo lipu. -- They stayed in the library.
> tomo tawa mi li pona. -- My car ("moving house/structure") is good.
> mi tawa lon tomo moku. -- I am going to the restaurant ("house of food").
@ -98,19 +100,55 @@ And here are some examples of the location words:
> sinpin ona li pona lukin. -- Their face looks good.
## Phrases
There are two different ways to say "goodbye". If you are leaving, it's:
> mi tawa! -- Goodbye! (literally "I'm going.")
If someone else is leaving, it's:
> tawa pona! -- Goodbye! (literally "Good movement!")
In fact, a lot of words followed by "pona" are used as greetings.
> moku pona! -- Bon appetit! / Have a nice meal! (literally "Good food!")
> lape pona! -- Good night! / Sweet dreams! (literally "Good sleep!")
## Dialectal differences
> %info%
> This part of the document describes how certain toki pona courses differ in
> explaining certain ideas.
The official book uses "lon" with a wider meaning, also including "with". For
* The official book uses "lon" with a wider meaning, also including "with". For
example, "I speak in toki pona" is translated as "mi toki lon toki pona". This
does not seem to be a common usage of the word.
Other courses also use "anpa" instead of "noka" to mean "below" (using "noka"
only to specifically mean "leg" or "foot".) The word "anpa" will be covered in
[page 7](7.html).
* The official book uses "noka" to mean both "foot" and "below". This is a
relatively new usage, and other courses prefer using "anpa" instead of "noka" to
mean "below" (using "noka" only to specifically mean "leg" or "foot".) The word
"anpa" will be covered in [page 7](7.html).
* Sometimes, words like "kepeken" and "tawa" can be used both as prepositions
("using", "towards") and as verbs ("to use", "to move"). The official book
provides an example for "kepeken", where it's used as a verb:
> o kepeken ala ilo ike. -- Don't use bad tools.
The "o kama sona e toki pona!" course provides a different example in [lesson
6](http://tokipona.net/tp/janpije/okamasona6.php):
> mi kepeken e ilo. -- I'm using tools.
The difference is that in the former example, the object ("ilo ike") is directly
followed by the phrase "kepeken ala", and in the latter, "kepeken" is followed
by "e", like for any other verb.
This course will follow the latter convention, since it is less ambiguous and
allows for more grammar. But in most such sentences, whether or not "e" is used
should not make the meaning ambiguous.
## Exercises
@ -146,5 +184,4 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
> * mi pona e tomo tan sina.
> * ona li lukin e lipu lon tomo lipu.
[Next page](7.html) [Previous page](5.html)
[Previous page](5.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](7.html)

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@ -4,21 +4,21 @@
The vocabulary for this page:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|-------|----------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| a | (emotional interjection) | n/a |
| anu | or (for yes/no questions) | Georgian "an" (or) |
| mu | (any animal sound) | "moo" onomatopoeia |
| o | (addressing people, commands) | Georgian "-o" (vocative case) |
| seme | what? (for questions) | Mandarin "shénme" (what, smth) |
| word | meaning |
|-------|----------------------------------|
| a | (emotional interjection) |
| anu | or (for yes/no questions) |
| mu | (any animal sound) |
| o | (addressing people, commands) |
| seme | what? (for questions) |
| word | meaning | derived from |
|-------|----------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| kute | listen, hear, obey, ear | Acadian French "écouter" (listen)|
| nimi | word, name | Finnish "nimi" (name) |
| lawa | head, control, own, rule, main | Serbo-Croatian "glava" (head) |
| anpa | lowly, humble, to conquer/defeat | Acadian French "en bas" (below) |
| insa | inside, contents, center, stomach| Tok Pisin "insait" (inside) |
| word | meaning |
|-------|----------------------------------|
| kute | listen, hear, obey, ear |
| nimi | word, name |
| lawa | head, control, own, rule, main |
| anpa | lowly, humble, to conquer/defeat |
| insa | inside, contents, center, stomach|
## Interjections and commands
@ -161,4 +161,4 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
> * jan sama mije sina li lukin sama mute sina.
> * o tawa ala lon ma.
[Next page](8.html) [Previous page](6.html)
[Previous page](6.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](8.html)

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@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
To learn how to adapt names into unofficial words, first you have to know how
toki pona's phonology works. The language's words consist of a series of
syllables assembled under a (C)V(N) system. This means that each syllable
syllables assembled under a \(C\)V\(N\) system. This means that each syllable
consists of an optional consonant, then a vowel, then a nasal (the "n" sound).
In addition, the sequences "ji", "ti", "wo" and "wu" turn into "i", "si", "o"

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@ -4,18 +4,18 @@
The vocabulary for this page:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|-------|----------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| kule | color, colorful | French "couleur" (color) |
| jelo | yellow (and its shades) | English "yellow" |
| laso | blue, green (and its shades) | Welsh "glas" (blue) |
| loje | red (and its shades) | Dutch "rooie" (red) |
| pimeja| black, dark | Finnish "pimeä" (dark) |
| walo | white, bright | Finnish "valko-" (white) |
| nasa | unusual, strange, crazy, drunk | Tok Pisin "nasau" (stupid) |
| jaki | dirty, disgusting, toxic | English "yucky" |
| moli | death, dying | Acadian French "mourir" (die) |
| unpa | sexual (or marital) relations | onomatopoeia |
| word | meaning |
|-------|----------------------------------|
| kule | color, colorful |
| jelo | yellow (and its shades) |
| laso | blue, green (and its shades) |
| loje | red (and its shades) |
| pimeja| black, dark |
| walo | white, bright |
| nasa | unusual, strange, crazy, drunk |
| jaki | dirty, disgusting, toxic |
| moli | death, dying |
| unpa | sexual (or marital) relations |
## Colors
@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
> %spoiler%
> * I like the color red.
> * Give me the orange(-colored) juice.
> * Give me the orange (or orange-colored) juice.
> * I like how your flowers look.
> * I don't drink alcohol.
> * Don't kill them!
@ -98,4 +98,4 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
> * mi lon tomo loje.
> * jan nasa li kute ala e mi.
[Next page](9.html) [Previous page](7.html)
[Previous page](7.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](9.html)

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@ -4,18 +4,18 @@
The vocabulary for this page:
| word | meaning | derived from |
|-------|----------------------------------|----------------------------------|
| pi | "of" (groups adjectives) | Tok Pisin "bilong" (of) |
| la | "if/when" (introduces context) | Esperanto "la" (definite article)|
| luka | hand, arm | Serbo-Croatian "ruka" (arm) |
| linja | long flexible object, hair | Finnish "linja" (line) |
| palisa| long solid object, branch, stick | Serbo-Croatian "palica" (rod) |
| selo | outer form, shell, skin, boundary| Esperanto "ŝelo" (skin) |
| sijelo| body, physical state, torso | Serbo-Croatian "tijelo" (body) |
| len | cloth, clothes, layer of privacy | Acadian French "linge" (clothing)|
| lete | cold, raw | Acadian French "frette" (cold) |
| musi | entertaining, artistic, fun, game| Esperanto "amuzi" (have fun) |
| word | meaning |
|-------|----------------------------------|
| pi | "of" (groups adjectives) |
| la | "if/when" (introduces context) |
| luka | hand, arm |
| linja | long flexible object, hair |
| palisa| long solid object, branch, stick |
| selo | outer form, shell, skin, boundary|
| sijelo| body, physical state, torso |
| len | cloth, clothes, layer of privacy |
| lete | cold, raw |
| musi | entertaining, artistic, fun, game|
Time to introduce two another particles in this language: "pi" and "la".
@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ For example:
> %info%
> This part of the document describes how certain toki pona courses differ in
> explaining certain ideas.
> explaining certain ideas, or how communities differ in using them.
The official book, the "o kama sona e toki pona!" course and my personal style
differ on how to place punctuation in sentences that use "la".
@ -73,10 +73,9 @@ punctuation.
The online course doesn't use any punctuation.
I personally prefer using the comma after "la", but for the sake of
compatibility with other courses, no punctuation will be used. Since commas are
not used as actual grammatical features in written toki pona, it is possible to
vary their usage.
I personally prefer using the comma after "la" for aesthetic purposes, but in
this series, no punctuation will be used. Since commas are not used as actual
grammatical features in written toki pona, it is possible to vary their usage.
## Exercises
@ -86,7 +85,7 @@ Now, try to figure out the meaning of these sentences.
* tomo ni la mi toki kepeken toki pona, mi toki kepeken toki Inli.
* sina moku e soweli lete la ona li ike tawa pakala sina.
* kalama musi ona li pona mute.
*
* sina kepeken ike e ilo la ona li pakala.
And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
@ -94,7 +93,7 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
* He is in the bar ("house of crazy water").
* The loud person ("person of large sounds") says weird things.
* That blonde ("woman of white hair") is good-looking.
*
* If you don't talk to people, you won't have friends.
<a name="answers" href="#answers" onclick="revealSpoilers();">Reveal answers</a>
@ -103,14 +102,13 @@ And try to translate the following sentences into toki pona.
> * In this house, I speak toki pona and English.
> * If you eat raw meat, it will be bad for your body.
> * Their music ("entertaining sounds") is very good.
> *
> * If you misuse ("use badly") the tools, they will break.
> %spoiler%
> * sewi li pimeja la o awen lon tomo.
> * ona li lon tomo pi telo nasa.
> * jan pi kalama suli li toki e ijo nasa.
> * meli ni pi linja walo li pona lukin.
> *
[Next page](10.html) [Previous page](8.html)
> * sina toki ala e jan la sina jo ala e jan pona.
[Previous page](8.html) [Top page](index.html) [Next page](10.html)

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@ -7,26 +7,25 @@ about *toki pona*, a constructed language originally designed in 2001 and
then gradually revised over the years by Sonja Lang.
The language is designed around the ideas of minimalist design and simplifying
one's thoughts, with complicated ideas being broken into their basic components.
one's thoughts by breaking down complicated ideas into their basic components.
It only uses 120 "official words" (with a few additional ones being
sometimes used by the community), has an incredibly simple grammar and uses few
sounds that are hard to confuse.
As a result, the language is considered to be incredibly easy to learn, with
some people claiming to be able to read it after only days and achieving fluency
within a week or two.
With an official vocabulary of around 120 words (plus some new additional
words created in the community), a simple grammar and an easy-to-learn phonology,
learning toki pona is, in fact, a relatively simple challenge, even compared to
other simplified constructed languages, such as Esperanto.
However, with that simplicity also come limitations. Many words have multiple
meanings, and a lot of phrases or sentences are ambiguous without context.
meanings, and some phrases or sentences are ambiguous without context.
Expressing many concepts and ideas in toki pona will require one to come up with
their own phrases or rephrase them completely (which, as mentioned before, is
part of the language's idea).
The language is also designed to be easy to use regardless of one's native
language. The sounds and syllable structure used in toki pona are distinct from
one another and common across many languages, whereas the vocabulary features
words borrowed from many languages across the world.
In addition, toki pona is also designed to be easy to use regardless of one's
native language. The sounds and syllable structure used in toki pona are
distinct from one another and common across many languages, whereas the
vocabulary features words borrowed from many languages across the world.
# About this course
@ -37,32 +36,69 @@ Sonja Lang herself. It is not free, but it's a well-written book with lots of
additional texts to read and it explains the language very well.
Another useful resource is the online course ["o kama sona e toki
pona!"](http://tokipona.net/tp/janpije/okamasona.php) (learn
toki pona!) by Bryant Knight (aka "jan Pije"). It has some differences in how it
uses certain words, and the past versions of the course have attracted some
controversy, but it's also a well-made course.
pona!"](http://tokipona.net/tp/janpije/okamasona.php) (learn toki pona!) by
Bryant Knight (aka "jan Pije"). It has some differences in how it uses certain
words, and the past versions of the course have attracted some controversy over
their bigoted content, but it's also a well-made course.
My goal here is to try and present a version that tries to account for the
different ways people speak and write toki pona and the way it is being used
now. My personal style is mostly based on "pu", but with slight adjustments, but
other styles will be covered as well.
now. Some pages will include "Dialectal differences" sections, in which these
differences will be covered.
The page numbered zero will provide basic info on the language's spelling and
pronunciation, and each page past that will introduce 10 new words.
---
## Table of Contents
* [page 0 - spelling and pronunciation](0.html)
* [page 1 - basic sentences](1.html)
* [page 2 - adjectives](2.html)
* [page 3 - verbs and objects](3.html)
* [page 4 - oh no! more vocabulary](4.html)
* [page 5 - this and that](5.html)
* [page 6 - prepositions and locations](6.html)
* [page 7 - interjections, questions, commands and names](7.html)
* * [page 7a - more about making unofficial words](7a.html)
* [page 8 - colorful language](8.html)
* [page 9 - (WIP) complex adjectives and contexts](9.html)
* [page 9 - complex adjectives and contexts](9.html)
* [page 10 - pre-verbs and time](10.html)
* [page 11 - (TODO) numbers](11.html)
* [page 12 - (TODO) the final countdown](12.html)
* [page x1 - (TODO) community additions](x1.html)
* [page 11 - numbers](11.html)
* [page 12 - the final countdown](12.html)
---
* [page x1 - (extra) old and new words](x1.html)
---
## Useful resources
Apart from the above-mentioned book and courses, here are some good resources
and links for people who want to learn or use toki pona:
* [tokipona.net](http://tokipona.net) (warning: if your "HTTPS Everywhere" addon
is set to "Encrypt All Sites Eligible", disable it for tokipona.net, or else
it will redirect you to an unrelated website)
* [/r/tokipona subreddit](https://reddit.com/r/tokipona)
* ["ma pona pi toki pona" Discord server](https://discord.gg/XKzj3ex)
* [toki pona Telegram group](https://telegram.me/joinchat/BLVsYz92zHUp2h2TYp9kTA)

93
pages/tokipona/x1.md Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,93 @@
% toki pona extra page 1 - old and new words
% /dev/urandom
% april 2020
All the words that have been described in pages 1 through 12 are present in the
official toki pona book. However, there are some additional words that were
either used before and didn't appear in the book, or words that have been
created by the toki pona community after that.
A more or less exhaustive list of all words in toki pona that are, or were, used
is the ["nimi ale
pona"](https://docs.google.com/document/d/10hP3kR7mFN0E6xW3U6fZyDf7xKEEvxssM96qLq4E0ms/edit)
document.
This page, however, will describe all the words that, from my point of view,
seem somewhat common in online usage, as well as the way some of the official
120 words are alternatively used in the community.
Of course, given that part of toki pona's idea is to reduce the number of words
and to remove unnecessary ideas, any such usage will have some controversy. I
will try and provide my own opinions on the words in this list.
## Old words: kin, namako and oko
Before the official toki pona book was published, there were certain words that
were commonly used, but had meanings that were too similar or unnecessary. But
instead of being removed, these words were added as synonyms to other words.
The word "kin" is described as a synonym for "a", but whereas "a" is a more
generic expression of emotion, "kin" was used as an emphasis word similar to
"really" or "indeed". I believe that this meaning is covered very well by the
words "a" (as an emotional indicator) and "mute" (as a type of emphasis).
The word "namako" was used to mean "addition" or "spice". In the official book,
it was listed as a synonym for "sin", the word meaning "new", "extra" or
"additional". While the two words do have somewhat separate meanings, I
personally think that "sin", especially when used as a noun or in a noun phrase
"sin moku" (food addition), can be used to express the same idea very well.
The word "oko" is listed as a synonym for "lukin". When these were two separate
words, "oko" specifically meant "eye", whereas "lukin" meant "sight" or
"vision". Given how "kute" means both "hearing" and "ear", this seems to me like
the right call to make.
## Direction
While toki pona has words for "up", "down", "ahead" and "behind", it doesn't
have words for "left" or "right", instead just having one word for "side".
Some people have invented phrases either based on the fact that most people
write with their right hand ("poka pi luka sitelen" = right, "poka pi luka
sitelen ala" = left), have their heart on the left side of their body ("poka
pilin" = left, "poka pilin ala" = right), write text from left to right ("poka
open" = left, "poka pini" = right).
All of these, of course, are not 100% correct in all situations: there are
people who are left-handed, who have their heart on the right side of the body
(dextrocardia) or who write from right to left. (Though, to be fair, all the
major writing systems *for toki pona* -- the latin alphabet, sitelen pona and
sitelen sitelen -- are written left-to-right.)
The "nimi ale pona" document instead lists two "post-pu" words that are supposed
to be more specific: "soto" for left and "te" for right. I personally think that
these words might be necessary in case there needs to be a distinction between
left and right, but in most cases, it's better to avoid using them.
## Gender and sexuality
There are words "mije" and "meli" that mean "male" and "female" respectively.
However, there are some people that either don't identify as male or female
personally, or were biologically born neither male nor female.
The word "tonsi" was created to describe such people, or, in some context, trans
people or anyone in the LGBT community.
In addition, the word "kule" (color) is sometimes given an additional meaning --
sometimes "gender", sometimes "LGBT". At first, this might raise questions, such
as "what about 'people of color'?", but in the toki pona community, a person's
race or skin color is usually mentioned directly (e.g. "white person" is "jan pi
selo walo", "person of white skin").
## Joke words
In addition, there are some words that were created as jokes by Sonja Lang
herself. In the "nimi ale pona" document, they're listed as "w.o.g. Sonja". The
most common is "kijetesantakalu", which refers to raccoons and other animals
from the Procyonidae family.
Other such joke words include "mulapisu" for pizza and "yupekosi" for "to revise
your old work only to make it worse"; note that toki pona doesn't use the letter
"y" and therefore it's unknown how to actually pronounce this word.
[Top page](index.html)