musi: Difference between revisions

From sona pona, the Toki Pona wiki
Content added Content deleted
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 10: Line 10:
{{Needs work|inclusion of more meanings|section}}
{{Needs work|inclusion of more meanings|section}}


The [[semantic space]] of {{tp|musi}} includes things considered artistic, entertaining, humorous, or interesting.<ref>{{cite lipamanka}}</ref> It includes games.
The [[semantic space]] of {{tp|musi}} includes that which is artistic, entertaining, humorous, or interesting, such as things or ideas with those properties, the properties themselves, and the abstract concept of them.<ref>{{cite lipamanka}}</ref>


==={{tp|pu}}===
==={{tp|pu}}===

Revision as of 09:09, 22 January 2024

musi in sitelen pona
musi in sitelen sitelen
Pronunciation /ˈmu.si/
Usage 2023: Core (100% → )2022: Core (100%)
Book and era nimi pu
Part of speech Content word
Codepoint 󱤻 U+F193B

musi is a core content word relating to art and entertainment.

Etymology

The word musi is derived from Esperanto amuzi, meaning "to amuse, to entertain".[1]

Semantic space

Under construction This section needs work:

inclusion of more meanings

If you know about this topic, you can help us by editing it. (See all)

The semantic space of musi includes that which is artistic, entertaining, humorous, or interesting, such as things or ideas with those properties, the properties themselves, and the abstract concept of them.[2]

pu

In the "Official Toki Pona Dictionary" section, the book Toki Pona: The Language of Good defines musi as:

ADJECTIVE  artistic, entertaining, frivolous, playful, recreational

ku

For Toki Pona Dictionary, respondents in ma pona pi toki pona translated these English words as musi:[3]

entertainment5, fun5, funny5, play5, game5, comedy5, art3, artistic3, fascinating2, humour2, interesting2, irony2, sport2, enjoy2, creative2, playoffs2

sitelen pona

The sitelen pona glyph for musi (󱤻) possibly represents a smile with rosy cheeks or a lyre.[4]

References

  1. "Word Origins". tokipona.org. Archived from the original on 8 August 2002.
  2. lipamanka. "toki pona dictionary". lipamanka.gay.
  3. Lang, Sonja. (18 July 2021). Toki Pona Dictionary. Illustrated by Vacon Sartirani. Tawhid. ISBN 978-0978292362. p. 289.
  4. ilo Eko. (14 November 2020). "sitelen pona etymology rough draft i guess". Google Docs. Archived from the original on 5 November 2023.

Further reading