Basic Grammar

Warning

This documentation may be incomplete, broken or inaccurate.

The essential details to get a grasp on Kokanu grammar and start exploring how to express yourself and communicate. The coverage is very fast paced and minimally detailed, more detailed articles are linked if you want to expand your knowledge of a given area.

This guide assumes you have some familiarity with the Kokanu vocabulary. Words that directly affect the grammar are explained here in the guide, but other words used in the example sentences will not. You click on any Kokanu word to see a definition of the word.

Base Forms

Every word has one base form, either base noun, base verb, or base modifier. Any word can act in any form, but its base determines how it acts in other forms. You can always distinguish when a word is being used as a noun, verb or modifier.

Verbs are marked by the particles le and o.

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
ɞ̄ȷ ɞı ʋȷ ɞx̄:men mi le makan.
I eat.”

Nouns are marked by the prepositions, like men, in, ki, and wija.

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
ɞ̄ȷ ɞı ʋȷ ɞx̄ ōı ɞx̄:men mi le makan in makan.I eat food.”

Modifiers are activated when placed after a noun or verb.

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
ɞ̄ȷ ɞı ʋȷ ɞx̄ ɕıxı ōı xſɕʃɤı ɞx̄:men mi le makan wiki in kuwosi makan.I quickly eat an edible fruit.”

Check out the Word Derivations guide for more info.


Relations between action and noun phrases

The structure of a Kokanu sentence is formed from an action phrase, marked by le or o, surrounded by noun phrases which relate to the action in some way. men marks a noun phrase which is the agent of the action. in marks a noun phrase which is the object of the action. ki marks a noun phrase which is the recipient of the action. wija marks a noun phrase which is the instrument of the action. The action phrases and noun phrases can be placed in any order as long as they are marked properly.

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
ɕıɂ ɞʃʌʃ ōı ɞx̄ ʋȷ ʋ̄ſ ʌɂʋı ɞ̄ȷ ɞı:wija moto in makan le lun tajali men mi.I prepare food using fire.” / “I cook food.”

When the subject is at the start of a sentence, however, men can be dropped.

LikanuLatin script
ɞ̄ȷ ɞı ʋȷ ɞx̄:men mi le makan.
ɞı ʋȷ ɞx̄:mi le makan.

Prepositions, le, and o can be negated by placing no after them. no does not serve any other function.

These three sentences mean the same thing but have different emphasis:

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
ɞı ʋȷ ƨʃ ɞx̄ ōı xſɕʃɤı:mi le no makan in kuwosi.I don’t eat fruit.” (but I may do something else to it)
ɞı ʋȷ ɞx̄ ōı ƨʃ xſɕʃɤı:mi le makan in no kuwosi.I don’t eat fruit.” (but I may eat something else)
ɞ̄ȷ ƨʃ ɞı ʋȷ ɞx̄ ōı xſɕʃɤı:men no mi le makan in kuwosi.I don’t eat fruit.” (but someone/thing else may)

Conjunctions in Kokanu can be between nouns in a phrase, or between sentences.

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
ɞı ʋȷ ɞx̄ ōı xſɕʃɤı ōſ oſxɞ:mi le makan in kuwosi un ukama.I eat fruits and vegetables.”
ɞı ʋȷ ɞx̄ ōı xſɕʃɤı ōſ ɞı ʋȷ ʋʃ ɤ̄ſ ƨȷ ɂ̄:mi le makan in kuwosi un mi le lo sun ne jan.I eat fruits and I leave (this place).”

An imperative statement is created by replacing a subject + le with just o (no subject).

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
ʌſ ʋȷ ʋʃ:tu le lo.You move.”
oʃ ʋʃʭo lo!Move!”

For more information, check out our Using the Parts of Speech guide.


Relations between words within phrases

Modifiers come after a noun to indicate an adjective, or after a verb to indicate an adverb. Quantity words serve ordinary functions as modifiers, but have an additional quantity function when preceding a word.

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
xſɕʃɤı ɕ̄kuwosi wanfirst fruit”
ɕ̄ xſɕʃɤıwan kuwosione fruit”
ʌʃʜȷ ʋ̄tope lanvery good”
ʋ̄ ʌʃʜȷlan topeseveral goodnesses”
ʋ̄ ɞılan mi“we”

The word je is similar to the word “of” in English. The word following it is always derived as a noun.

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
ʌıʜ ɞx̄tipa makanedible box”
ʌıʜ ɂȷ ɞx̄tipa je makanfood box”, “lunchbox”
xſɕʃɤı ɵ ɞıkuwosi ha mimy second fruit”
xſɕʃɤı ɂȷ ɵ ɞıkuwosi je ha mi"us two’s fruit”

The word wa marks a modifier without any noun or verb needing to precede it, and applies to the entire phrase before it.

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
xſɕʃɤı ɂȷ ɵ ɞı ɕ ɵ̄ſɤıkuwosi je ha mi wa hunsius two’s red fruit”

For more information, refer to our Clarifying Descriptions guide.


Relations between clauses within phrases

ta starts a new clause (sentence within a sentence), while te starts a new clause and marks the first word as a verb. The te clause can modify a noun, and in these cases the noun being modified is the subject of the clause.

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
ƨ̄ı ʌȷ ɞx̄nin te makan“person who eats

te can also be used without modifying a noun to create a clause that starts with a verb anywhere in a sentence, but the clause must end with a comma if more comes after it.

LikanuLatin scriptEnglish
ʌȷ ɞx̄ ōı xſɕʃɤıʋȷ ʌʃʜȷ:te makan in kuwosi, le tope.eating fruit is good.”

ta functions like te, except that it doesn't mark the first word that follows it as a verb, so the clause may start with a subject or any other preposition. It is simple to use when not modifying a noun.

ta mi le makan in kuwosi, le tope "it's good that I eat fruit"

mi le pon in ta tu le pasan "I cause that you are happy", "I make you happy"

When ta does modify a noun, it is more complicated. te tells you that the noun being modified is the subject of the following clause, ta doesn't say anything about the role of the noun being modified in the clause.

nin ta mi le suki might seem like a direct translation from English "person that I like", but in Kokanu it's meaningless. The clause mi le suki sits next to the word nin with no relation between them. It would be like saying in English "place that I go". You have to establish the role of "place" in the clause "I go", i.e. "place that I go to" where "to" tells you that "place" is the direction/goal of the clause "I go". Kokanu does this in a very similar way.

nin ta mi le suki in "person that I like", where in indicates the role of nin in the relative clause.

Sentence: mi le suki in nin "I like the person"
Noun: nin ta mi le suki in "person that I like"

Any preposition can be used to make this relation.

jan ta mi le lo ki "place that I go to"

jon ta mi le tun in ne wija "tool that I do this with/using"

The preposition at the end of the clause is called a "dangling preposition", and it's the preposition that would have been used on the modified noun in a normal sentence, e.g. "the place that I go to," "I go to the place"

Alternatively, unlike in English, the clause can be written out as a full sentence, where ja refers back to the noun being modified.

In the last example, ja can be dropped from the end, leaving the dangling preposition, which is how it's always done in English.

In any case, the clause must end with a comma if more follows.

kuwosi ta nin le makan in, le tope

For more information check out our TODO guide.


Coupling Word Particles

wi and mu are particles that apply to the next word only, creating a "coupling". wi forces modifiers

sikin wi no konen “improbable event”

kuwosi wi no makan “inedible fruit”

For more information, check out our Coupling Modifier Negator guide.

mu constructs a noun that is a "doer" of an action, or the agent of the action.

mu kanisa “thinker”

To make the agent cause the action rather than do the action, you can replace mu with pan.

mu tiku “dier”

pan tiku “killer”

For more information, check out or TODO guide.


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