Styles of speech: Difference between revisions
Content added Content deleted
m (Menasewi moved page Styles of speech to Styles of Toki Pona) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Toki Pona]] has many '''{{w|Style (sociolinguistics)|styles}}''' that are common to particular speakers, [[communities]], or [[era]]s. |
|||
{{Needs work|}} |
|||
A '''style of speech''' is a set of linguistic variants. |
|||
==List of styles |
==List of notable styles== |
||
*[[Head dropping]] |
*[[Head dropping]] |
||
*[[pu-rism|{{tp|pu}}-rism]] |
*[[pu-rism|{{tp|pu}}-rism]] |
||
Line 20: | Line 19: | ||
*{{tp|[[ma pona pi toki pona]]}} dialect |
*{{tp|[[ma pona pi toki pona]]}} dialect |
||
*{{tp|[[nasin panke]]}} |
*{{tp|[[nasin panke]]}} |
||
{{Stub}} |
|||
[[Category:Styles of Toki Pona]] |
[[Category:Styles of Toki Pona]] |
Revision as of 12:24, 25 December 2023
Toki Pona has many styles that are common to particular speakers, communities, or eras.
List of notable styles
Word avoidance
- en't
- gendern't (avoiding meli, mije, and sometimes tonsi)
- jan't
- jon't
- lon't
- nanpan't
- pin't
- tenpo dropping
Community-specific styles
- kulupu pi toki pona pi ma Anku dialect
- ma pona pi toki pona dialect
- nasin panke