Homographs: Difference between revisions

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*[[ale|{{lang|pl|''ale''}}]] (but)
*[[ale|{{lang|pl|''ale''}}]] (but)
*[[jaki|{{lang|pl|''jaki''}}]] (what, which)
*[[jaki|{{lang|pl|''jaki''}}]] (what, which)
*{{lang|pl|''[[Jan]]''}} (''masculine name'')
*[[jan|{{lang|pl|''Jan''}}]] (''masculine name'')
*[[lawa|{{lang|pl|''lawa''}}]] (lava)
*[[lawa|{{lang|pl|''lawa''}}]] (lava)
*[[len|{{lang|pl|''len''}}]] (flax)
*[[len|{{lang|pl|''len''}}]] (flax)

Latest revision as of 10:25, 29 November 2023

Caution: The subject of this article is just for fun. It might not be meant or appropriate for serious use.

These widespread Toki Pona words are homographs with English words. Some are cognates; most have unrelated meanings.

Common words[edit | edit source]

Names[edit | edit source]

In other languages[edit | edit source]

Polish[edit | edit source]

  • a (and, while)
  • Ala (feminine name)
  • ale (but)
  • jaki (what, which)
  • Jan (masculine name)
  • lawa (lava)
  • len (flax)
  • luka (gap)
  • lupa (magnifying glass)
  • kin (cinemas, genitive)
  • ku (toward)
  • ma (has, mine)
  • mama (mother)
  • mi (to me)
  • mu (to him)
  • ni (neither)
  • nimi (using them)
  • o (about)
  • oko (eye)
  • ona (she)
  • pali (is smoking/burning)
  • pan (sir)
  • pana (sir's)
  • sama (alone, feminine)
  • tan (dance, archaic)
  • toki (goings-on)
  • tu (here)
  • wan (van)

Portuguese[edit | edit source]

Spanish[edit | edit source]

See also[edit | edit source]