@packbat Well, try to come up with a sentence that doesn't have a verb in it
it's not really possible, except as a response to a question, and then you can argue that the verb is implicit
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@Felthry depending on the analysis, "jan li lon tomo" has no verb, because "lon" is a preposition. it literally means "person inside building", no action specified.
...but that does depend on the analysis, because some tokiponists will say "lon" is both verb and preposition. there isn't a consensus on it.
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@packbat the copula is a special case, some languages have it as a verb (like english) and others don't (like, apparently, toki pona)
-F
@Felthry yeah, toki pona doesn't have a copula verb - that kind of sentence is usually analyzed as using the verb spot for the thing the subject is. so, "jan li pona" says that a person is gooding, and that's understood to meam the person is good.
it didn't occur to us to analyze sentences like "jan li lon tomo" as copulas - that's interesting!
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@packbat yeah, it's expressing a state of being, so it's a copula. Whether to count that as an implicit verb or not is a matter of debate, but it's definitely a special case--even in languages like english where it's an explicit verb it has some very unique properties
-F
@Felthry that seems to be the consensus - we're mostly curious as to why
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