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Punctuation & Formatting
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Punctuation & Formatting

headIn Toki Pona, punctuation is always arbitrary (beyond sentence separation) and serves more of a reading aid.
headIn sitelen pona, the characters themselves provide most of this function. For sentence separation, no distinction is made between exclamation marks, question marks or periods.
headInstead, the content of the sentence itself indicates if it's a question, said energetically, or a regular statement:
headkon li lete
headThis sentence is a normal statement.
headkon li lete ala lete
headkon li lete anu seme
headThese are 2 ways for the grammar to indicate a yes/no question.
headkon li lete a
headThe word "a" can indicate emotional emphasis, so this sentence is more of an exclamation.
headseme li lete
headkon li seme
headThe word "seme" is used to ask about details, so this sentence is a question.
sentence separation
headThere is no total agreement how to separate sentences in sitelen pona. The best method is to work with line breaks. In this course, if sentences need to be separated in the same line, we will use an interpunct "·" for this purpose.
headmi tawa. o awen
headHowever, this should be used rarely. Line breaks will be the default.
headmi tawa
o awen
related formatting
headThere may be additional features of sitelen pona that appear in the lessons.
headIf there are quotation marks, we will use CJK-style characters to indicate speech:
headte toki to
headIn this course, colons will not be in use. Instead, we rotate the symbol for "ni" to indicate the direction of which sentence gets referred to.
headmi lukin e niv<
waso li tawa
headwaso li tawa
mi lukin e ni^<
headIt is also common to put "pi" phrases inside of an extended "pi" shape.
headjan pisona pona li pana e sona
jan pi(sona pona) li pana e sona