Phatic expressions and social conventions: Difference between revisions

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=={{tp|pu}} phrase book==
{{Hatnote|"{{tp|mi kama sona e toki pona}}" redirects here. For help learning Toki Pona, see [[Learning resources]].}}
{{Official Toki Pona}}
{{nasin pu}}
{{Source|Toki Pona: The Language of Good/Phrase Book|''Toki Pona: The Language of Good'' {{sect}} Phrase Book}}
{{Official Toki Pona}}
 
{{pu|en}} includes a "Phrase Book" section with some possible expressions for quick reference.<ref>{{cite pu|124}}</ref> The following copy also includes the phrases written in {{tp|[[sitelen pona]]}}, as they are often encountered in custom emojis and the like.
 
{| class="wikitable" style="background: transparent; font-family:'Gentium Plus', 'Gentium Basic', Gentium, sans-serif;"
|- style="font-family: sans-serif;"
! colspan="2" | {{tp|toki pona}}
! rowspan="2" | English
|- style="font-family: sans-serif;"
!{{tp|[[sitelen Lasina]]}}
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|-
|{{tp|sina pilin seme?}}
|{{sp|sina pilin-seme|font="linja lipamanka"seme}}
|how are you feeling?
|-
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|{{tp|sina pona}}
|{{sp|sina pona}}
|you’re cool, I like you<span style="font-family: sans-serif;"><ref group="lower-alpha">The Esperanto edition of {{tp|pu}} hasadds a footnote thatto translatesthis to(translated below):<blockquote>Note from the translator: {{tp|sina pona}} is also often used to say "thank you", nowadays (in 2022) somewhat more often than just {{tp|pona}}.</blockquote></ref></span>
|-
|{{tp|mi olin e sina}}
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|-
|{{tp|tomo telo li lon seme?}}
|{{sp|tomo- telo li lon seme|font="linja lipamanka"}}
|where is the washroom?
|}