added dialectal info in 10 and 12, fixed 12's title

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/dev/urandom 2020-04-10 16:55:36 +03:00
parent 99bc14fb90
commit b8939a8b65
2 changed files with 22 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ The words "open" and "pini" express that the action is beginning or ending.
> mi open pali e tomo. -- I start working on a house.
> mi pini pali e tomo. -- I finish working on a house.
> mi pini pali e tomo. -- I stop/finish working on a house.
The word "sona" by itself can mean "knowledge" or "to know", but as a pre-verb,
it means "know how to [do the action]":
@ -126,6 +126,16 @@ Of course, you can ask questions regarding time by using "tenpo seme":
> tenpo seme la sina pini e pali sina? -- When will you finish your work?
## 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 words "open" and "pini" are used as pre-verbs by some in the toki pona
community, but they're not defined or used as such in the official toki pona
book or the "o kama sona e toki pona!" course.
## Exercises
Now, try to figure out the meaning of these sentences.

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@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
% toki pona page 11 - the final countdown
% toki pona page 12 - the final countdown
% /dev/urandom
% april 2020
@ -36,6 +36,16 @@ 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.
## 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.
In the official dictionary, "pu" is only defined as "interacting with the
official Toki Pona book". Usage of this word as a noun, while common among some
users, is unofficial.
## Exercises
Now, try to figure out the meaning of these sentences.