Basically, the SFGPL must adhere strictly to the grammar as described in sentence pattern, but the rest may be decided to some extent by the user. However, an exemplary grammar is described in this chapter.
To modify a whole sentence, you basically modify the verbs in that sentence by using na
.
For example, in the example sentence "I go to Tokyo.", the "to Tokyo" part is a modifier.
In this case, the SFGPL uses the following.
ta ga na sa 'go' li pun fa 'Tokyo'
Another alternative is to use me
.
me ta ga sa 'go' so li pun fa 'Tokyo'
In particular, when modifying verbs, like prepositions in English, they are expressed using li
and DeterminerN.
Examples of English prepositions and SFGPLs are given in the following table.
English | Meaning | SFGPL |
---|---|---|
at/in/on/to/from | Time | li pin |
at/in/on/to/from | Place | li pun |
for | Reason | li pon |
for | Way/Means | li ban |
from | Start | li fan |
to | End | li fen |
between/among | Section | li fin |
in | In | li fun |
into | Into | li tun fun |
out | Out | li fon |
up/over | Move&Above | li tun man |
above | Above | li man |
down | Move&Below | li tun men |
under | On&Below | li min men |
below | Below | li men |
on | On | li min |
right | Right | li mun |
left | Left | li mon |
near | Near | li tin |
by/about | By/About | li tan tin |
with | With | li ten tin |
In the SFGPL, comparative expressions using comparative classes in English are defined by mo
, but not comparisons using superlative or equivalent classes.
It is recommended that such sentences be expressed as follows.
Comparative expressions such as "A is B(-er) than C" are expressed by mo
.
"My bag is bigger than yours." is expressed as follows.
mo mi ga so san fa 'big' so wan sen ge
Comparative expressions such as "A is the B(-est) in/of C" are expressed with the following syntax.
me A V ka ki B li fun C
"My bag is the biggest in my class." is expressed as follows.
me mi ga so san fa 'bag' so ka ki wan li fun mu ga so san fa 'class'
When expressing "the N-th X(-est)", a numerical value is added to the modifier, as in ka X li N
.
"My bag is the second biggest in my class." using ordinal numbers is expressed as follows.
me mi ga so san fa 'bag' so ka ki ka wan li mal pil li fun mu ga so san fa 'class'
Comparative expressions such as "A is as B as C" are expressed with the following syntax.
In this case, use wen
to mean "similar".
me ba A C V ka B wen
"My bag is as big as his." is expressed as follows.
me ba mi ga so san fa 'bag' sen lan gi so ka wan wen
Constant matters and facts, such as customs, periodic matters and unchanging facts, are expressed by not adding a tense, as is the case with the present.
To express "I cook every day." in SFGPL, use the following.
ta ga na sa 'cook' li pin me fa 'day' so la 'every'
"The Earth revolves around the Sun." in the SFGPL can be expressed as follows.
ta fa 'Earth' na sa 'revolve' li tun tin fa 'Sun'
And to express "English is spoken all over the world." in the SFGPL as follows.
ta fa 'English' na ne sa 'speak' li fun dan fa 'world'
When creating a sentence that simply states that something exists, use gen
.
This has the same meaning as the English There is/are construction.
For example, "There is a book on this table.".
ta fa 'book' na gen li pun ma gu so fa 'table'
It is possible to produce sentences like those in topic-prominent languages, which are common in East Asian languages such as Japanese, Chinese, Korean, and Indonesian. A topic-prominent language is a language in which, in addition to the usual subject, there is a grammar that allows the subject of the sentence to be presented. This makes it easy to produce sentences that contain both a topic and a subject. The SFGPL allows for the production of sentences containing topics in a simplified manner, though not in the explicit manner of the East Asian languages.
Sentences containing a topic or subject fragment are constructed in the same way as sentence type.
A sentence containing both a topic and a subject is expressed as follows. In this case, “T” is the topic, and “C” consists of comments (sentences, words, etc. that explain the topic).
ma T so C
As an example, the Japanese phrase "象は鼻が長い"(“Elephants have long noses” [topic: elephant, subject: nose]) can be expressed in SFGPL as follows.
ma fa '象' so me fa '鼻' so la '長い'
ma fa 'elephant' so me fa 'nose' so la 'long'
English | SFGPL |
---|---|
I | ga |
go | sa 'go' |
to Tokyo | li pun fa 'Tokyo' |
bag | fa 'bag' |
big | wan |
yours(possessive) | sen ge |
my class | mu ga so san fa 'class' |
his(possessive) | sen lan gi |
cook | sa 'cook' |
every day | me fa 'day' so la 'every' |
the Earth | fa 'Earth' |
revolve | sa 'revolve' |
the Sun | fa 'Sun' |
English | fa 'English' |
speak | sa 'speak' |
all over the world | li fun dan fa 'world' |
book | fa 'book' |
on this table | li pun ma gu so fa 'table' |
象(elephant) | fa '象' |
鼻(nose) | fa '鼻' |
長い(long) | fa '長い' |
elephant | fa 'elephant' |
nose | fa 'nose' |
long | la 'long' |