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TP parts of speech

Page history last edited by Dave Raftery 13 years, 9 months ago

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The basic structure of a tp sentence is Condition la Subject li Verb e Object  Prepositional-Phrase, where P-P is adverbial.

 

Verbs

 

anpa to lower, to defeat
awen to wait, pause, stay
kama jo to get
jo to have, contain
kama to cause, to come, to become, to happen
ken can, to be able to
kepeken to use
kulupu to get together
lape to sleep
lawa to lead, steer, control, rule
lete to freeze
lon to be in / at / on, to exist, put in place (tr)
ante change, alter, modify
awen stay, wait, remain, keep
jaki pollute, spoil
jan personify, humanize
kalama make noise
lape sleep, rest
lili reduce, shorten, shrink
lukin to see, look
moku eat, drink
musi to have fun
mute make a lot
olin to love
pali to do, make, work
pana to give, send, put, release
pakala to mess up, destroy
pilin to think, feel, sense, touch
pona fix, repair
seli to burn
sin renew, renovate
sike to move in a circle
sitelen write, draw
sona to know
suli enlarge, lengthen
tawa to move / to go to
telo water, wash
toki talk, communicate
utala to fight
weka throw away, remove
wile want desire, need

 

kama + verb

kama suli becomming bigger, growing
kama wawa becoming stronger ??
kama jo to get
kama pona welcome
kama moli is dying
kama sona to learn, study
tenpo kama the future
tenpo suno kama tomorrow

 

A transitive verb is followed by the separator 'e' and then the direct object. An intransitive verb does not use the separator 'e'.

 

Prepositions

lon - in, at, on (Locative)

kepeken - using, with (Instrumental)

tawa - to, for

sama - same (Similarity)

tan - because of, from, by (Causation)

poka - beside (Proximity)

 

The following are not prepositions: anpa, insa, monsi and sewi are nouns. They must be used with the verb:  lon.

 

Modifiers can be almost any word and follow the noun they modify

 

A pi phrase can be used after li to tell who owns something:

kili ni li pi mi.

ilo ni li pi sina.


Questions

Are you eating not eating?

sina moku ala moku?

 

You are watching what?

sina lukin e seme?

kalama ni li seme? -- What was that noise?

 

jan seme - who or whom

sina kama tan seme? -- You came because-of what?


 

Official Idioms

This is good to me

ni li pona tawa mi

 

tv = sitelen tawa = moving picture

pretty = pona lukin

here or there = lon ni

how = kepeken nasin seme = using what method

who = jan seme = what person

why = tan seme = what reason

 

Unofficial idioms

 

after = tenpo ni la

near = poka

live = lon

part = wan

some = mute lili

touching = poka

truth = lon

to cause = kama


 

Asking questions

 

Yes/no

 

What / When / Who

 

seme

 

anu


Colors

laso - blue, blue-green

loje - red

jelo - yellow, light green

walo - white

pimeja - black, dark

 


Syntactic rules

The language is simple enough that its syntax can be expressed in ten rules:

[brackets] enclose optional elements;
*asterisks mark elements which may be repeated

1. A sentence may be
(a) an interjection
(b) of the form [sub-clause] [vocative] subject predicate
(c) of the form [sub-clause] vocative predicate
(The interjection may be a, ala, ike, jaki, mu, o, pakala, pona, or toki.)
2. A sub-clause may be
(a) [taso] sentence la
(b) [taso] noun phrase la
("If/during sub-clause, then main-clause")
3. A [vocative] is of the form
[noun phrase] o
4. A subject is of the form
(a) mi or sina
(b) other noun phrase li

(mi mute and sina mute require li to form a predicate.)

5. A predicate may be
(a) simple noun phrase [prepositional phrase]*, or
(b) verb phrase [prepositional phrase], or
(c) predicate conjunction predicate (that is, a compound predicate)
(The conjunction may be anu (or) or li (and).)
6. A noun phrase may be
(a) noun [modifier]*, or
(b) simple noun phrase pi (of) noun plus modifier*, or
(c) noun phrase conjunction noun phrase (that is, a compound noun phrase)
(The conjunction may be anu (or) or en (and). A 'simple' noun phrase is one which does not have a conjunction.)
7. A prepositional phrase is of the form
preposition noun phrase
8. A verb phrase may be
(a) verbal
(b) modal verbal
(c) verbalx ala verbalx (both verbals are the same)
(d) modalx ala modalx plus verbal (both modals are the same)
(The modal may be kama (coming/future tense), ken (can), or wile (wants to).)
9 A verbal may be
(a) verb [modifier]* (this is an intransitive verb)
(b) verb [modifier]* plus a direct object* (this is a transitive verb)
(c) lon or tawa plus a simple noun phrase
(Some roots may only function as transitive or intransitive verbs.)
10. A direct object is of the form
e simple noun phrase

Some roots are used for grammatical functions (such as those that take part in the rules above), while others have lexical meanings. The lexical roots do not fall into well defined parts of speech; rather, they may generally be used as nouns, verbs, or modifiers, depending on context or their position in a phrase. For example, ona li moku may mean "they ate" or "it is food".

 

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