Parts: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{Needs work|Detail on the strategies and the intro paragrah}}
Toki Pona lacks a dedicated word for '''parts''' of
==Rationale==
{{Needs work|Expand section|section}}
Linguist {{
==Strategies==
Line 18:
{{Example
|ijo lili li tan ijo suli<br />ijo lili li lon ijo suli
|A small thing is from/in a bigger thing
}}
|
Latest revision as of 09:01, 17 May 2024
Toki Pona lacks a dedicated word for parts of things. Options include using wan or the preposition lon. The word lawa often refers to a part of something that controls the whole. The word kipisi ("section, to cut"), a common nimi ku suli, can describe divisions and resulting parts.
Rationale[edit | edit source]
Linguist lipamanka argues that any word may refer to the whole of a part of an object, using kili as an example: the word kili may refer to either an apple or a single slice.[1]
Strategies[edit | edit source]
There are several strategies to talk about parts of an object. Any general part may be described by its size of quantity in contrast to the whole:
lili ijolili ijo
a little of a thing
mute ijomute ijo
much of a thing
ale ijoale ijo
the entirety of a thing
The clearest strategy, however, is to use full sentences. For example:
ijo lili li tan ijo suli
ijo lili li lon ijo suliijo lili li tan ijo suli
ijo lili li lon ijo suliA small thing is from/in a bigger thing
See also[edit | edit source]
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ lipamanka. "lipamanka's essays". lipamanka.gay. Retrieved 8 May 2024.