Styles of speech

From sona pona, the Toki Pona wiki
Revision as of 08:39, 17 May 2024 by Menasewi (talk | contribs)

Toki Pona has many styles of speech that are common to particular speakers, communities, or eras.

List of notable styles

Community-specific styles

Phonology

Word avoidance

Caution: This page may be misleading or lack nuance, and should be rewritten. Do not assume this information to be correct.
Under construction This section needs work:

According to jan Kekan San:

  • jon't and palin't mainly refer to semantic shifts, with the actual word-avoidance styles being obscure
    (jo is at 99% reported usage, pali is at 100%)
  • Could also cover niche or otherwise unused styles as teaching tools ("e.g. no pi, no modifiers, no preverbs, no second li, no colors but kule, no names") or for fun ("only third person, minimize the word list as much as possible, no e, no la")

Additionally:

  • What are en't and lon't
If you know about this topic, you can help us by editing it. (See all)

Historical styles

Caution: The subject of this section is historical information that is presented for completeness, and might not reflect current usage.

See also

This page is a stub. You can help us by expanding it.