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/dev/urandom 2020-12-02 21:43:51 +03:00
parent c246139962
commit 55333aef76
7 changed files with 56 additions and 3 deletions

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@ -125,6 +125,8 @@ language's 120 word dictionary.
* * [musi Soki (rules of shogi) (wip)](shogi.html)
* [lipu nasin pi musi Lisi Masan (Riichi Mahjong) (WIP)](riichi_mahjong.html)
* ["insa pi supa lape" -- an original sitelen pona font](supalape.html)
* [ante toki tawa musi pi sitelen tawa (video game translations)](game_patches.html)

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@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
% toki pona personal style
% /dev/urandom
% november 2020
Different people have different ideas about how toki pona is supposed to work.
Given the language's intentionally minimalist grammar and vocabulary, that's to
be expected. Here's a list of my personal preferences and phrases that I use
commonly.
* In sentences that only have "mi" or "sina" as a subject, but several
predicates (verbs or adjectives that would otherwise be separated by "li", I
separate the sentence into two:
> mi pali. mi moku. - I work and eat.
* I try to avoid using "en" anywhere other than the subject, but tolerate using
it in phrases that follow "pi".
* When I use "kepeken" as a verb ("to use") instead of a preposition ("using,
with the help of"), I include the object marker "e" the same way I would with
other verbs.
* I may insert commas as pauses to differentiate between ambiguious phrases or
to help in reading possibly confusing sentences. For example:
> mi pana e tomo tawa sina. - I give your car.
> mi pana e tomo, tawa sina. - I give you a house.
> mi pana e tomo tawa, tawa sina. - I give a car to you.
* I insert commas after "la" in all circumstances:
> ken la, mi ken pali. - Maybe I can work.
> tomo pali li open la, mi ken pali. - If the office is open, I can work.
* I use "open" and "pini" as pre-verbs meaning "begin (doing smth)" "finish/stop
(doing something)".
* When a numeral is used as a number, I usually write it with Arabic numerals.
If it's an ordinal number, the word "nanpa" may be represented with a number
sign (`#`).
* I don't use "pi" before "nanpa" if it's followed by an ordinal number.
* I use "pu" as all possible parts of speech, not just as a verb.
[Back to top page](index.html)

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@ -230,6 +230,9 @@ sina lukin e supa musi tan sewi la, nasin pi ijo musi li sama nasin palisa pi il
|||||||||||||||||
```
![sitelen ni li pana lukin e sona ni: jan seme li kama jo e ijo musi seme lon
tenpo seme? ijo seme li lon sinpin moli?](mahjong_wall.gif)
jan musi ale li pali e ijo sama, kepeken nasin nanpa sama, lon tenpo tu.
ni li pini la, jan musi ale li kama jo e ijo musi wan tan sinpin kepeken nasin nanpa sama.

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@ -2,7 +2,6 @@
#define C_PAGEBG #221f31
#define C_HEADERBG #221f31
#define C_HEADERBGHALF rgba(34,31,49,0.5)
#define C_BODYBG #fefefe
#define C_FOOTERBG #050403
@ -287,7 +286,6 @@ HASH(#itime-progress) {
}
.header_text {
background: C_HEADERBGHALF;
padding-inline: 2em;
}
.content {

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@ -9,8 +9,9 @@
<meta property="og:title" content="<?theme title?>"/>
<meta property="og:type" content="website"/>
<meta property="og:url" content="https://rnd.neocities.org/<?theme dir?><?theme source?>"/>
<link href="/style.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all">
<link href="/style.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all" title="Default Style">
<link href="xstyle.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all">
<link href="/style_alt.css" rel="alternate stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all" title="Funky">
<link rel="icon" type="image/png" href="favicon.png">
<?theme style?>
</head>