Appendix:Toki Pona/powe
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Toki Pona
[edit]Glyph origin
[edit]sitelen pona |
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- sitelen pona: From lon (“true”) + ala (“not”), replacing the dot with a small X mark.
Etymology
[edit]Possibly from French faux (“false”) or French pas vrai (“not true”)
Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]powe
- (uncommon) unreal, false, untrue, fake
- 2021, kala pona Tonyu, “nasin kijetesantakalu pona”, in lipu monsuta, number uta monsuta, page 17:
- sina lukin tawa tomo pimeja la o moli powe lon supa anpa.
- If you look at a dark room, play dead on the floor.
- 2023 July 1, jan Kapesi Pake, “jan pali li ken ala ken kama lawa e nasin pali?”, in lipu tenpo[1], number (nanpa) nasin, page 5:
- nasin mani li toki powe kin tawa jan.
- The economic system also lies to people.
Verb
[edit]powe
- (uncommon, transitive, intransitive) to lie, to pretend, to deceive, to fake or be false
- 2021 February 1, kulupu En, “ijo lon pi lon ala”, in lipu kule:
- tenpo mute la, ni li lon: ijo li lon, anu ijo li powe.
- A lot of the time, this is the case: things are true, or things are false.
- 2022, Hermann Hesse, trans. jan Kala, jan Sitata:
- ona la ale ni li ike li nasa li powe
- To him, all was bad and strange and lying.
- 2023 January 3, jan Olipija, “nasin pi utala meli mije”, in lipu kule:
- ona [nasin pi utala meli mije] li mama e ike tawa tonsi tan ni: ona la, ‘… meli mije en mije meli li jaki. jan li ante e sijelo ona la, ona li powe li jaki. …’
- It [oppositional sexism] nurtures hatred toward non-binary people because to it, ‘… Masculine women and feminine men are disgusting. If people change their bodies, they are dishonest and disgusting. …’
- 2023 August 24, mije Luke, “sona musi lili pi ma Antateka”, in lipu tenpo[2], number (nanpa) ma, page 7:
- sitelen pi ma ale la, ma Antateka li suli tawa lukin; taso, ni li powe lili. ma Mewika seli la, ona li lili; taso, ma Elopa la, ona li suli.
- On a world map, Antarctica looks big, but this is a bit deceiving. Compared to North America, it is small, but compared to Europe, it is big.
Usage notes
[edit]In lipu Linku this word is classified as "obscure," being used by 23% of respondents in a poll from 2023.