Styles of speech: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with "{{Needs work|}} A '''style of speech''' is a set of linguistic variants. ==List of styles of speech== * pu-rism ===Word avoidance=== * gendern't * Head dropping * jan't * jon't * pin't * tenpo dropping ===Community-specific styles=== * {{tp|nasin panke}} Category:Styles of Toki Pona") |
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[[Toki Pona]] has many '''{{w|Style (sociolinguistics)|styles}} of speech''' that are common to particular speakers, [[communities]], or [[era]]s.
{{Needs work|}}▼
==List of notable styles
* [[
* [[Acronyms]]
===Word avoidance===▼
* [[Head dropping]]
* {{tp|[[
* {{tp|[[
* [[
* [[
* [[Reduplication]]
===Community-specific styles===
* {{tp|[[kulupu pi toki pona pi ma Anku]]}} dialect
* {{tp|[[ma pona pi toki pona]]}} dialect
* {{tp|[[nasin panke]]}}
===Phonology===
[[Category:Styles of Toki Pona]]▼
* [[Denasalization]]
* [[Sandhi]]
▲===Word avoidance===
{{Misleading|section}}
According to {{tok|jan Kekan San}}:
*{{tp|jo}}n't and {{tp|pali}}n't mainly refer to semantic shifts, with the actual word-avoidance styles being obscure{{Indent|({{tp|jo}} is at 99% reported usage, {{tp|pali}} is at 100%)}}
*Could also cover niche or otherwise unused styles as teaching tools ("e.g. no {{tok|pi}}, no modifiers, no preverbs, no second {{tok|li}}, no colors but {{tok|kule}}, no names") or for fun ("only third person, minimize the word list as much as possible, no {{tok|e}}, no {{tok|la}}")
Additionally:
*What are {{tp|en}}'t and {{tp|lon}}'t
|section}}
* [[en't|{{tp|en}}'t]]
* [[gendern't]] (avoiding {{tp|[[meli]]}}, {{tp|[[mije]]}}, and sometimes {{tp|[[tonsi]]}})
* [[jan't|{{tp|jan}}'t]]
* [[jon't|{{tp|jo}}n't]]
* [[lon't|{{tp|lon}}'t]]
* [[nanpan't|{{tp|nanpa}}n't]]
* [[pin't|{{tp|pi}}n't]]
* [[tenpo dropping|{{tp|tenpo}} dropping]]
===Historical styles===
{{Main|Historical usage}}
{{Start section|Historical}}
* [[Archaic words]]
* {{tp|[[li pi]]}}
* {{tp|[[pi X en Y]]}}
{{End section}}
==See also==
* [[Calendar systems]]
* [[Number systems]]
{{Stub}}
{{General}}
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Latest revision as of 08:40, 17 May 2024
Toki Pona has many styles of speech that are common to particular speakers, communities, or eras.
List of notable styles[edit | edit source]
Community-specific styles[edit | edit source]
- kulupu pi toki pona pi ma Anku dialect
- ma pona pi toki pona dialect
- nasin panke
Phonology[edit | edit source]
Word avoidance[edit | edit source]
- en't
- gendern't (avoiding meli, mije, and sometimes tonsi)
- jan't
- jon't
- lon't
- nanpan't
- pin't
- tenpo dropping
Historical styles[edit | edit source]
See also[edit | edit source]
Development and usage | jan Sonja · Toki Pona: The Language of Good (2014) · Tokiponidos · Software (Tools · Fonts) · suno pi toki pona · Toki Pona census · Toki Pona Dictionary (2021) · UCSUR · Linku · ISO 639-3 |
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Conventions | Phonology (Phonotactics) · Words (Tokiponization) · Grammar (Word order) · Social conventions · Writing systems (sitelen Lasina · sitelen pona · sitelen sitelen) · luka pona (sign language) · Number systems · Calendar systems · Styles (pu · pu-rism · ku · Nonstandard) |
Philosophy | Minimalism · Context · Circumlocution · Expression · Lexicalization · Multiple sentences · Comparisons |
Resources | Frequently asked questions · Courses · Dictionaries · Cheat sheets · Visual aids · Communities · Websites · Media |