Prepositions
A preposition is a type of content word used to express spatial or temporal relations or to mark various semantic roles.[1][2] The phrase formed by a preposition together and the complement that follows it is called a prepositional phrase. In Toki Pona, the words that can act as prepositions are kepeken, lon, sama, tan, and tawa.
Prepositions can be difficult to grasp for multiple reasons: these words have specific meanings depending on whether they are being used as prepositions or as transitive verbs. In terms of grammar, it is often ambiguous whether a word is being used as a preposition or as a simple modifier.
Prepositions vs. transitive verbs
In the sentence A li B e C, the subject A causes the direct object C to become C B.
So, in the sentence ona li tawa e telo, the subject ona causes the telo ("water") to become telo tawa ("going water"); the sentence translates as "They move the water".
In ona li tawa telo, the word tawa instead acts as a preposition. Given that tawa telo is a prepositional phrase meaning "toward water", this sentence translates as "They go to the water".
For another example:
kasi li lon ma alekasi li lon ma ale.
Plants exist at all of the land.
Plants are everywhere.
kasi li lon e ma alekasi li lon e ma ale.
Plants cause all the land to exist.
Plants created the Earth.
Modifiers
Like preverbs, prepositions are most often modified by a limited group of semiparticles.
ona li tawa ala teloona li tawa ala telo.
They don't go to the water.
Ambiguity
Because prepositions are not marked with any particle in standard Toki Pona, they are a bit ambiguous. For example, in ona li tawa telo, tawa telo can be taken as a prepositional phrase ("toward water"), or a noun phrase ("the going of water"; "fluid motion") if telo is taken as a modifier.
Word order
Some speakers limit prepositions to occurring at the end of a sentence.
Transitive prepositional phrases
Some speakers allow an entire prepositional phrase to be used as a transitive verb followed by e.
This can be thought of in the same way as a normal transitive verb. In the sentence A li prep B e C, the subject A causes the direct object C to become C prep B.
ona li tawa telo e wasoona li tawa telo e waso.
It moves birds to the liquid.
They sent a bird to the water.
kasi li lon ma ale e kon ponakasi li lon ma ale e kon pona.
Plants cause good air to exist at all of the land.
Table of prepositions
Word | Sense | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Preposition prep ijo |
Intransitive preposition li prep ijo |
Transitive verb li prep e ijo |
Transitive preposition li prep A e B | |
kepeken | using | to use | (controversial) see kepeken e | to make B use A |
lon | at/in/on | to exist at/in/on | to create | to make B be at/in/on A |
sama | like | to be like | to make alike | to liken B to A |
tan | from | to be/come from | (rare) to blame | to make B be/come from A |
tawa | toward | to go to | to move | to move B to A |
References
- ↑ jan Juli. (23 September 2022). "nasin toki pona: how to use prepositions". GitHub. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
- ↑ jan Kekan San. "Prepositions and Context". mun.la.