diff --git a/locale/tok/translations.suml b/locale/tok/translations.suml index 9e5e4f434..09c02f1e7 100644 --- a/locale/tok/translations.suml +++ b/locale/tok/translations.suml @@ -8,8 +8,8 @@ home: headerLong: 'List of pronouns' welcome: 'lipu nimi la kama pona' intro: > - We're creating a source of information about nonbinary and gender neutral language. - why: 'lipu ni li lon tan seme?' + lipu ni li pana e nimi wile jan e sona tonsi. + why: 'lipu li lon tan seme?' about: - > mi toki e sina la mi wile kepeken nimi sina. sina soweli Kasijona la mi o toki ala e ni: sina jan Punima. mi ni la sina ken pilin nasa li ken pilin ike. @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ home: whatisit: 'ni li suli tan seme?' mission: header: 'wile mi' - summary: 'mi utala tawa ni: nasin toki o pona tawa jan ale.' + summary: 'nasin toki o pona tawa jan ale.' freedom: > nimi pona o ken.
jan ale li ante. ona taso li sona pona e ni: nimi seme li pona tawa ona. @@ -188,192 +188,20 @@ terminology: definition: 'Definition' faq: - header: 'FAQ' - headerLong: 'Frequently asked questions' + header: 'sona' + headerLong: 'sona pi nasin nimi jan' questions: - nonbinary: - question: 'What is nonbinary?' + toki-inli: + question: 'lipu Pronouns.page li lon tan ni: toki Inli li ike li nasin mije meli e nimi "ona". toki pona li ike ala la lipu ni o toki pona tan seme?' answer: - > - Gender is way more complicated than just a simple distinction male/female. - Even from a purely biological standpoint we distinguish chromosomal sex, - genetic sex, hormonal sex, phenotypic sex… - They aren't necessarily congruent with each other, they don't have to be binary. - {https://twitter.com/RebeccaRHelm/status/1207834357639139328=(more info here)}. - And when we get to the cultural aspect, “gender” is a social construct. - Depending on time and location being “a woman” or “a man” can mean having radically different - rights, duties, norms… In Europe men used to wear high heels and stockings, - and native peoples of North America have been recognising a third gender for centuries - {https://gender.wikia.org/wiki/Two-Spirit=(two-spirit)}, etc. etc. - - > - Nonbinary is an umbrella term describing the identity of people - who don't fit the binary man/woman distinction. - It includes for instance people who are - {https://gender.wikia.org/wiki/Agender=agender}, - {https://gender.wikia.org/wiki/Gender_Fluid=gender fluid}, - {https://gender.wikia.org/wiki/Demigirl=demigirls}, - {https://gender.wikia.org/wiki/Demiboy=demiboys}, - and {https://gender.wikia.org/wiki/Non-binary=many many others}. - - > - Nonbinary isn't necessarily something “between” masculinity and femininity. More like “beyond”. - Nonbinary people don't have to be androgynous, don't have to use neutral pronouns, etc. - It's about being free from gender roles, not about creating new ones. - why-respect: - question: 'Why should I respect some strange pronouns?' + mi ante e toki la mi ante mute e nasin ilo kin. mi weka e ni: lipu li wile toki e kule mute pi nimi "ona". nasin lipu li kama ni: sina ken toki e nimi sina. + mu: + question: 'mu?' answer: - > - Because addressing people in the way they want to be addressed is the basis of social relations. - You wouldn't call Ashley “Samantha”, you wouldn't drop “sir”/“madam” when addressing your supervisor, etc. - And there's people who don't want to be called either “{/he=he}” or “{/she=she}”. - If you don't accept that, it only shows you in bad light. - - > - “Strange pronouns” are just a matter of getting used to. - made-up: - question: 'Those pronouns are made up!' - answer: - - > - Yes. Yes they are. And so is every single word in every language. - Some words are just older than others. - how-to-know: - question: 'How do I know how to address someone?' - answer: - - > - You can just ask! Yes, it might be a bit awkward, but the more we do it, the less awkward it gets. - If we can ask somebody their name, why not their pronouns? - - > - (Just please don't phrase it as “are you a boy or a girl?”. - This question implies that there's just two correct answers, - and it suggests unhealthy curiosity about someone's genitals. - Instead, you could just ask “what are your pronouns?” or “how should I refer to you?”) - - > - It's also important to normalise simply telling people your pronouns when you introduce yourself. - “Hi, I'm Michæl, {/he=he/him}”. It's not hard – but for trans and nonbinary people it means so much! - It's even easier done online: just put your pronouns (or a link to examples from our website) to your bio. - - > - Remember also that many people might use a different name and a different set of pronouns depending on situation. - They might not be out among friends or coworkers yet, but among friends be comfortable living their truth. - Be mindful. You might for instance ask them “which pronouns should I use in front of your boss?”, etc. - - > - Some people give multiple pronouns, eg. “{/he&she=he/she}” or “{/they&he=they/he}”. - That means they like all of those forms. Usually, the first one is the preferred one. - who-uses-it: - question: 'Does anyone even use that?' - answer: - - > - Yes! Millions of enbies all around the world. - Every pronoun listed here has someone that actually uses it in everyday life. - authority: - question: 'Are those nonbinary pronouns approved by some kind of authority?' - answer: - - > - Language is not some kind of god-given, ancient magic set in stone. - It's just a tool that we use to communicate. - When we change as a society, and when the world around us changes, - we adjust the language we use to be able to better describe it. - We're its users, so we're the authority on how we want to use it. - - > - Dictionaries take their time to start including those changes, - which doesn't make the change illegitimate in any way. - But eventually the new forms, if used often enough, get included in dictionaries. - {https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/singular-nonbinary-they=Merriam Webster}, for example, - accepts the use of {/they=singular “they”} as a nonbinary pronoun. - - > - You can also read some {https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=neopronouns=academic papers} - on neopronouns. - bio: - question: 'Why should I put my pronouns in bio on social media?' - answer: - - > - If you're cis (= not trans) and you use “{/he=he}” or “{/she=she}” matching your gender, - you might think that your pronouns are obvious. - And yeah, maybe that's true – as long as your name is mentioned in the profile (and is traditionally male of female) - or if you have your picture as avatar. - Many people don't – so it's hard to guess how they want to be called. - - > - But it's mostly about something more than that: your pronouns might be “obvious”, - but there are people whose pronouns are not. - They want to be addressed correctly, whether or not they “pass” as their gender, - whether or not they have transitioned (or if they want to transition at all). - Nonbinary people usually “don't look nonbinary”, we don't owe anyone androgyny. - - > - Sharing our pronouns is very important for trans, nonbinary and gender nonconforming people. - Alas, it also exposes and singles us out. - But if cis people do the same, it means the world for us. - It makes us feel more comfortable, safe and welcome - {https://avris.it/blog/why-everyone-should-have-pronouns-in-their-bio=(more reasons here).} - change: - question: 'Can I change my pronouns?' - answer: - - > - Of course! Nobody is surprised when someone changes their views, style, hobbies… - So why would it be strange that they discovered a part of their identity, - stopped liking their name, discovered a label that fits them well, etc.? - get-used-to: - question: 'Is it strange that I can''t get used to my own new pronouns?' - answer: - - > - Not at all! After many years of using pronouns congruent with one's gender assigned at birth - it's easy to forget oneself when switching to different ones. - - > - Pronouns ≠ gender. - Your gender won't drastically change just because you got confused once when someone called you “them”. - Don't worry. Experiment. See what fits you best. - preferred-pronouns: - question: 'Why shouldn''t I say “preferred pronouns”?' - answer: - - > - Because this phrase suggests that someone's pronouns are just a whim. - If someone just “prefers” to be called she, he won't _really_ feel bad, if I call him a “he”, right? - They look like a guy, after all, so it's gonna be easier for me! - - > - No! It's our pronouns. Not our “preferred pronouns”. It's our names, not our “preferred names”. - If you care about your trans and nonbinary friends and loved ones, then call them the right way. - gender-pronouns: - question: 'Why shouldn''t I say “gender pronouns”?' - answer: - - > - Because gender ≠ pronouns. Pronouns are just grammar. - Nonbinary folks can use binary pronouns, some lesbians use {/he=he/him} for cultural reasons, etc. - - > - Simply say “pronouns”. - flags: - question: 'Can you add this flag? Can you remove that flag?' - answer: - - > - No. - - > - Maintaining the list of flags and labels is an increasingly time-consuming task for our team. - It's also challenging in terms of filtering out trolls and vandals from valid, good-faith identities. - We don't want to be identity police. And we don't want to spend all our time on managing flags either. - It's a project about language and pronouns, after all, not about flags. They're just a bonus. - - > - We did our best to select a list of flags that are the most popular - and, to our best knowledge, generally accepted. - We are not planning to extend or shrink that list. - - > - We are aware that a few flags might not be liked by some - (eg. because of a history of TERFs trying to take over a term and make it transphobic, - because of multiple confusing definitions, - or even because of aspects of a life of a mythical character). - We are queer and trans ourselves, we care about our trans siblings. - Unfortunately, it's really hard to make such decisions - when we get messages both from trans people asking to add a flag they honestly identify with, - and also from other trans people asking to remove it because it somehow hurts trans people. - It's not like history of every label is clear or like there's an authoritative source to look it up. - And even if queerphobes try to make some terms hurtful, - we believe in the community's power to reclaim hateful terms. - - > - If you don't like a flag, just don't use it. - If your flag is missing, just upload it - (it will be marked as user-generated to mitigate vandalism). - custom-pronouns: - question: 'My pronouns aren''t listed' - answer: - - > - There's a generator on the homepage, you can use it to create a link to any pronoun set you like. - - > - You can also just list the five forms using slashes, eg. {/ze/zem/zir/zirs/zirself=ze/zem/zir/zirs/zirself}. - Keep in mind that all five forms are required in that case, otherwise the app can only guess what exactly you mean. + mu! mu mu. + links: header: 'Links' @@ -595,7 +423,7 @@ profile: If your pronouns follow the {/pronouns#nameself=nameself pattern}, you can also use a colon shorthand (eg. “:star”). pronounsNotFound: 'Unrecognised format. Please check out the instruction above.' - words: 'Words' + words: 'nimi ante' wordsColumnHeader: 'Column header' birthday: 'Age' birthdayInfo: 'We do not publish your birthday, just the calculated age.' @@ -667,11 +495,11 @@ profile: propagate: 'Propagate this change to your cards in all languages' opinion: yes: 'pona' - jokingly: 'musi' - close: 'jan poka taso' + jokingly: 'lon musi taso' + close: 'tan jan poka taso' meh: 'pona lili' no: 'ike' - bannerButton: 'Create a card' + bannerButton: 'o lipu e nimi sina e sina' card: link: 'Card picture' generate: 'Generate' @@ -706,7 +534,7 @@ profile: userNotFound: 'Such user doesn''t exist' required: 'Relationship is a required field' -share: 'Share' +share: 'o pana e ni tawa jan ante' crud: approve: 'Approve' @@ -738,18 +566,18 @@ footer: sibling: 'Sibling projects' stats: header: 'nanpa' - overall: 'all language versions' - current: 'only this version' + overall: 'lipu ale pi toki ante' + current: 'lipu ni taso' keys: users: 'Registered users' - cards: 'Cards' - visitors: 'Unique visitors' - pageviews: 'Page views' + cards: 'lipu' + visitors: 'mun li sike e ma la jan' + pageviews: 'mun la lukin' realTimeVisitors: 'Currently online' visitDuration: 'Avg visit duration' uptime: 'Uptime' responseTime: 'Avg response time' - month: 'month' + month: 'li lon lipu ni' notFound: message: 'lipu li lon ala' @@ -1003,7 +831,7 @@ report: translationMode: header: 'Translation Mode' - action: 'o toki ni e lipu ni' + action: 'o toki pona e ilo ni' welcome: > Is there a translation missing or an existing one needs a correction? You can click on the blue button in the bottom right corner to turn the Translation Mode on and off. @@ -1011,9 +839,9 @@ translationMode: in which you can modify the translation and compare it to the English text. Remember to click on the button “Commit changes” once you're done. logIn: 'You need to be logged in to propose translations' - changes: 'Changes' - commit: 'Commit changes' - revert: 'Revert changes' + changes: 'ante' + commit: 'o pana e ante' + revert: 'o weka e ante' pause: 'Pause Translation Mode' flags: