a
Etymology: onomatopoeia.
Particle: shows emphasis or emotion
aja
Etymology: Arabic حياة haya ‘life’.
Noun: life
Verb: to live, to be alive
Modifier: alive
ajuta
Etymology: Portuguese ajuda 'help, aid, assistance'.
Noun: help, support
Verb: to help, to support
akesi
Etymology: Dutch hagedis ‘lizard’.
Noun: reptile or amphibian
ala
Etymology: Georgian არა ara ‘no’.
Noun: nothing, negation
Verb: to negate
Modifier: no, not, none
Numeral: zero
Particle: negative answer
alasa
Etymology: Acadian French à la chasse ‘hunting’, ultimately from French chasser ‘to hunt’.
Pre-verb: to try to, to strive to
Verb: to hunt, to forage, to gather, to harvest
Modifier: hunting, foraging
alen
Etymology: Portuguese alem 'beyond'.
Preposition: more, beyond
ali
Etymology: Dutch alle ‘all’.
Noun: abundance, everything, universe
Verb: to complete
Modifier: all, abundant, countless, bountiful, every, plentiful, complete, whole
anpa
Etymology: Acadian French en bas ‘below’.
Noun: bottom, lower part
Verb: to bow down
Modifier: bowing down, downward, humble, lowly, dependent, below
ante
Etymology: Dutch ander ‘other, different’.
Noun: difference
Verb: to change, to alter, to modify
Modifier: different, altered, changed, other
anu
Etymology: Georgian ან an ‘or’.
Noun: decision, poll
Verb: to chose, to decide
Particle: or
apeja
Etymology: Finnish häpeä ‘shame, disgrace, dishonor’.
Noun: guilt, shame, disgrace
Verb: to accuse, to single out, to expose, to disgrace, to dishonor
Modifier: ashamed, disgraced, dishonored, guilty
awen
Etymology: Dutch houden ‘keep, care for, hold (in a particular state)’.
Noun: wait, safety
Pre-verb: to continue to
Verb: to stay, to wait, to remain, to keep
Modifier: enduring, kept, protected, safe, waiting, staying, remaining, stationary, permanent, sedentary
e
Etymology: A priori word.
Preposition: before the direct object
en
Etymology: Dutch en ‘and’.
Particle: between multiple subjects, between coordinate modifiers in a pi-phrase
enujo
Etymology: French ennuyeuse 'boring, annoying, tedious, dull'.
Noun: boredom, dullness
Verb: to bore
Modifier: boring, annoying, tedious, dull
epi
Etymology: English heavy.
Noun: weight
Verb: to weigh
Modifier: heavy, thick, fat, solid
esun
Etymology: Asante egŭaso, 'market, bazaar'.
Noun: market, shop, fair, bazaar, business transaction
Verb: to buy
Modifier: bought
ewin
Etymology: Gaelic ewin 'clove, fingernail, prong, claw'.
Noun: nail, hoof, claw, fingernail, prong, segment, talon, clove, horn
Verb: scratch
ijo
Etymology: Esperanto io ‘something’, utimately from Romance i- ‘(relative pronoun root)’.
Noun: thing, phenomenon, object, matter, something
Verb: to objectify
ike
Etymology: Finnish ilkeä ‘bad, mean, wicked’.
Noun: evil
Verb: to make bad, to worsen, to have a negative effect upon, to be bad
Modifier: bad, negative, evil, wrong
ilo
Etymology: Esperanto ilo ‘tool’, ultimately from German -el ‘(agent suffix)’ {cf Schlüssel ‘key’ ~ schließen ‘lock, shut’).
Noun: tool, implement, machine, device, engine
in
Etymology: English in.
Preposition: located at, present at
inkatan
Etymology: Malay ingatan 'memory'.
Noun: memory
Verb: to remember
insa
Etymology: Tok Pisin insait ‘inside, center, stomach’, ultimately from English inside.
Noun: internal organ, stomach, center, content, middle, inside
Modifier: central, between, middle
intawo
Etymology: Zulu indawo 'place, zone, area'.
Noun: place, space, point, zone, room, area, region
ita
Etymology: Arabic إذا 'iidha 'if'.
Preposition: inverse la (between the main sentence and the context phrase)
Particle: inverse la (between the main sentence and the context phrase)
jaki
Etymology: English yucky.
Noun: dirt, pollution, garbage, filth
Verb: to pollute, to make dirty
Modifier: disgusting, obscene, sickly, toxic, unclean, unsanitary
jan
Etymology: Cantonese 人 jan ‘person’.
Noun: human being, person, somebody
Modifier: human, somebody's, personal, of people
jasima
Etymology: Turkish yansıtmak ‘to reflect, reverberate’.
Noun: mirror, reflection
Verb: to reflect, to resound, to mirror, to be on the opposite/polar end of
Modifier: reflected, mirrored, opposite
jatila
Etymology: Marathi जटिल jaṭila 'complex, difficult'.
Noun: complexity, difficulty
Verb: to hinder, to obstruct
Modifier: complex, difficult
jelo
Etymology: English yellow.
Modifier: yellow, yellowish
jo
Etymology: Mandarin 有 yǒu ‘have’.
Verb: to have, to carry, to contain, to hold
jun
Etymology: Turkish yün 'wool'.
Noun: hair, wool, fur, feather
juna
Etymology: Esperanto juna 'young'.
Modifier: young
jupa
Etymology: Mandarin chinese 右 yòu 'right'.
Noun: the right side
Modifier: right (directional)
kala
Etymology: Finnish kala ‘fish’.
Noun: fish, marine animal, sea creature
kalama
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian галама galama ‘fuss, noise’.
Noun: sound, noise, voice
Verb: to produce a sound, to recite, to utter aloud, to ring, to play (an instrument)
kali
Etymology: Swahili gari 'car, wagon'.
Noun: vehicle, car, wagon
kalite
Etymology: Haitian Creole kalite 'kind'.
Noun: kind, type, class, category, quality
kama
Etymology: Tok Pisin kamap ‘event, arrive, happen, become, bring about, summon’, ultimately from English come up.
Noun: future
Pre-verb: to manage to, to succeed in
Verb: to come, to arrive, to become, to bring about, to summon
Modifier: arriving, coming, future, summoned
kan
Etymology: Finnish kanssa ‘with’.
Preposition: with, among, in the company of, with the help of, with use of
kanti
Etymology: Esperanto kanti 'sing'.
Noun: song, music, poetry
Verb: to sing, to recite
Modifier: musical, poetic
kapesi
Etymology: Greek καφές kafés ‘coffee’.
Modifier: gray, brown
kasi
Etymology: Finnish kasvi ‘plant’.
Noun: plant, vegetation, herb, leaf, grass, tree, wood
Verb: to grow (in the ground)
Modifier: vegetable, vegetal
ken
Etymology: Tok Pisin ken, ultimately from English can.
Noun: possibility, ability, power to do things, permission
Pre-verb: to be able to, to be allowed to, can, may
Verb: to make possible, to enable, to allow, to permit
Modifier: possible, allowed
kenta
Etymology: Latin centum 'hundred'.
Numeral: one hundred
kepeken
Etymology: Dutch gebruiken ‘to use’.
Verb: to use
Modifier: used
ki
Etymology: Māori ki 'to, towards, into'.
Preposition: to, toward, for, from the perspective of
kili
Etymology: Georgian ხილი xili ‘fruit’.
Noun: fruit, edible vegetable, mushroom
kilo
Etymology: International word 'kilo/kilogram'.
Noun: kilogram
kin
Etymology: Finnish -kin ‘too, also, still’.
Modifier: too, also, as well, indeed, even
Particle: confirmation
kipisi
Etymology: Inuktitut kipisi ‘cut’.
Noun: split, cut
Verb: to split, to cut, to sever
Modifier: sharp
kiwen
Etymology: Finnish kiven, genitive of kivi ‘stone’.
Noun: hard thing, stone, gravel, rock, pebble, mineral, lava, magma
Modifier: hard, solid, stone-like, made of stone or metal
ko
Etymology: Cantonese 膏 gou ‘cream, paste’.
Noun: clay, clinging form, dough, semi-solid, paste
koli
Etymology: Corean 꼬리 kkoli 'tail'.
Noun: tail, queue, trail, brush, stem
koma
Etymology: Spanish goma 'rubber'.
Noun: plastic, rubber, tire, condom
Modifier: plastic, rubber
kon
Etymology: Mandarin 空氣 kōngqì ‘air, atmosphere, ambience, opinion’.
Noun: air, wind, breath, essence, spirit, hidden reality, unseen agent
Verb: to breathe
Modifier: air-like, gaseous, ethereal
kule
Etymology: Acadian French couleur ‘color’.
Noun: color, paint
Verb: to color, to paint
Modifier: colourful, pigmented, painted, of or relating to the LGBT+
kulupu
Etymology: Tongan kulupu, ultimately from English group.
Noun: community, group, company, nation, society, tribe, people
Verb: to group, to join, to cluster
Modifier: communal, shared, public, of the society
kute
Etymology: Acadian French écouter ‘listen’.
Noun: ear
Verb: to hear, to listen, to pay attention to, to obey
Modifier: auditory
la
Etymology: Acadian French -la, proximal & topical suffix.
Particle: between the context phrase and the main sentence
lajo
Etymology: Japanese ラジオ rajio 'radio'.
Noun: news, information, radio, television, newspaper
lakima
Etymology: Latin lacrimae 'tears'.
Noun: sadness, cry, tears
Verb: to cry
Modifier: sad
lamo
Etymology: Nepali लामो lāmō 'long'.
Modifier: long, tall, extended, prolonged
lanpan
Etymology: Greek λαμβάνω lamváno ‘take, seize, grasp, receive’.
Verb: to catch, to receive, to get, to take, to seize
lansan
Etymology: German langsam 'slow'.
Modifier: slow, slowly, gentle, gently
lape
Etymology: Dutch slapen ‘sleep’.
Noun: sleep, rest
Verb: to sleep, to rest
Modifier: sleeping, resting
laso
Etymology: Welsh glas ‘blue, inexperienced’, ultimately from Proto-Brythonic glas ‘green, blue’.
Modifier: blue
lawa
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian glava глава ‘head’.
Noun: head, mind, plan, rule
Verb: to control, to direct, to guide, to lead, to own, to plan, to regulate, to rule, to steer
Modifier: main, leading, in charge
le
Etymology: Mandarin chinese 了 le, perfective marker.
Preposition: perfective marker
leje
Etymology: Spanish leyes 'laws'.
Noun: laws, the Law
Modifier: lawful, legal
leko
Etymology: English Lego, ultimately from Danish Lego ‘leg godt’ ‘play well’.
Noun: square, block, cube, stairs
Verb: to climb
Modifier: blocky, rectangular
len
Etymology: Acadian French linge ‘clothing’.
Noun: cloth, clothing, fabric, textile, cover, layer of privacy
Modifier: textile
lentu
Etymology: Basque leundu 'smooth'.
Modifier: smooth, fluent, flowing
lete
Etymology: Acadian French frette ‘cold’, ultimately from Old French freit ‘cold’.
Noun: cold
Verb: to cool
Modifier: cold, cool, uncooked, raw
li
Etymology: Toki pona li.
Preposition: imperfective marker
liko
Etymology: English liquor.
Noun: alcohol, liquor
Modifier: alcoholic, drunk, intoxicated
lili
Etymology: Tok Pisin liklik ‘small, little’, ultimately from Ramoaaina liklik.
Verb: to reduce, to lessen
Modifier: few, a bit
linja
Etymology: Finnish linja ‘line’, ultimately from Old Swedish linia.
Noun: long and flexible thing, cord, hair, rope, thread, yarn, line, wire
lipu
Etymology: Finnish lippu ‘flag, banner, ticket’.
Noun: flat object, book, document, card, paper, ticket, record, website
liso
Etymology: Portuguese riso, ‘laugh’.
Noun: laugh, laughter, joke, joy
Verb: to laugh, to joke
Modifier: happy, joyful
lita
Etymology: English liter.
Noun: liter
loje
Etymology: Dutch rooie ‘red (inflected)’, rood ‘red’.
Modifier: red, reddish
lon
Etymology: Tok Pisin long ‘at, in, on, (spacial particle)’, ultimately from English along.
Verb: to be real/true, to exist, to be awake, to be there, to be present
Modifier: real, true, existing
Particle: affirmative response
luka
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian ruka рука ‘hand, arm’.
Noun: arm, hand, tactile organ, wing
Numeral: five
lukin
Etymology: Tok Pisin lukim ‘see, look at’, luk ‘look’ (from English look) + -im ‘(transitive suffix)' (from English him, ’em).
Noun: eye
Pre-verb: to seek, to look for
Verb: to look at, to see, to examine, to observe, to read, to watch
lupa
Etymology: Lojban clupa ‘loop’, ultimately from Mandarin 圈 quān, English loop, Hindi पाश pāś, Arabic أنشوطة ʾanšūṭa.
Noun: door, hole, orifice, window, cave
ma
Etymology: Finnish maa ‘earth, land’.
Noun: earth, land, outdoors, world, country, territory, soil, ground
majuna
Etymology: Esperanto maljuna ‘old’.
Modifier: old, ancient
mama
Etymology: Georgian მამა mama ‘father’.
Noun: parent, ancestor, creator, originator, caretaker, sustainer
mani
Etymology: English money.
Noun: money, cash, savings, wealth
Verb: to sell
meli
Etymology: Tok Pisin meri ‘woman, wife, feminine’, ultimately from Tolai mari ‘pretty’ & English Mary.
Noun: woman, female, feminine person, wife
Modifier: female
meta
Etymology: English meter.
Noun: meter
mi
Etymology: Esperanto mi ‘I, me’, ultimately from Romance m- ‘(1st person singular oblique)’.
Noun: I, me, mine
Modifier: my
mije
Etymology: Finnish mies ‘man, husband’.
Noun: man, male, masculine person, husband
Modifier: male
mijon
Etymology: Spanish millón 'million'.
Numeral: one million
mila
Etymology: Basque mila 'thousand'.
Numeral: one thousand
mina
Etymology: mi + na.
Noun: we, us, ours
Modifier: our
minuto
Etymology: Spanish minuto 'minute'.
Noun: minute
moku
Etymology: Japanese モグモグ mogumogu ‘munching’.
Noun: food, drink
Verb: to eat, to drink, to consume, to swallow, to ingest
moli
Etymology: Acadian French mourir ‘die’.
Noun: death
Verb: to kill, to die, to be dead
Modifier: dead, dying, deadly, fatal
monsi
Etymology: Acadian French mon tchu ‘{vulgar} my ass’.
Noun: back, butt(ocks)
Modifier: back, behind, rear
monsuta
Etymology: Japanese モンスター monsutā ‘monster’, ultimately from English monster.
Noun: monster, fear
Verb: to fear, to frighten
mu
Etymology: onomatopoeia.
Verb: to roar, to bellow, to howl, to moo
Particle: animal noise or communication, non-speech vocalization
mun
Etymology: English moon.
Noun: moon, satellite, astronomical object
Modifier: lunar, monthly
musi
Etymology: Esperanto amuzi ‘have fun’, ultimately from French amuser.
Noun: art, recreation, game, play (of a game)
Verb: to play
Modifier: artistic, entertaining, frivolous, playful, funny
mute
Etymology: Esperanto multe ‘a lot’, ultimately from Latin multus.
Noun: quantity
Modifier: many, a lot, much, several, very
na
Etymology: terminations of sina and ona in toki pona.
Modifier: some, several, certain, an indeterminate amount
Particle: plural marker
nalama
Etymology: Bengali নরম narama 'soft'.
Modifier: soft, flexible, malleable, tender, gentle, ripe
namako
Etymology: Persian نمک namak ‘salt’.
Noun: salt, embellishment, spice
nanpa
Etymology: Tok Pisin namba ‘number, (ordinal marker)’, ultimately from English number.
Noun: number
Verb: to number
Modifier: numeric
nasa
Etymology: Unknown origin.
Modifier: unusual, strange, foolish, crazy, silly, stupid, weird
nasin
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian način начин ‘way, method’.
Noun: way, custom, doctrine, method, path, road
nena
Etymology: Finnish nenä ‘nose’.
Noun: bump, button, hill, mountain, nose, protuberance, smell
Verb: to smell
nesi
Etymology: Igbo n'èzí 'outside, outdoors'.
Noun: outside, (outer) space
Modifier: outside
ni
Etymology: Cantonese 呢 ni ‘this’.
Noun: this, here, now
Modifier: this
nimi
Etymology: Finnish nimi ‘name’.
Noun: name, word
Verb: to name
noka
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian noga нога ‘foot, leg’.
Noun: foot, leg, organ of locomotion
note
Etymology: Esperanto norde 'north'.
Noun: north
Modifier: north
o
Etymology: Georgian -ო -o ‘(vocative suffix)’ & English oh.
Preposition: vocative, imperative, or optative
oke
Etymology: English okay.
Particle: acknowledgment or acceptance
olente
Etymology: Esperanto oriente 'east'.
Noun: east
Modifier: east
olin
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian volim волим ‘I love’.
Noun: love, compassion, respect, affection
Verb: to love, to have compassion for, to respect, to show affection to
Modifier: loving, compassionate, respectful, affectionate
oliwa
Etymology: Spanish oliva 'olive'.
Noun: oil, fat, fuel, grease, olive
on
Etymology: ona without the termination a.
Noun: he, she, it, him, her
Modifier: his, her
ona
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian ona она ‘she’.
Noun: they, theirs, them
Modifier: their
onta
Etymology: Spanish onda 'wave'.
Noun: rhythm, beat, wave
Pre-verb: (repeating action)
Verb: blink
open
Etymology: English open.
Verb: to begin, to start, to open, to turn on
osa
Etymology: Finnish osa 'part, piece, component'.
Noun: part, piece, particle, element, component, subdivision, segment
ositen
Etymology: Esperanto okcidente 'west'.
Noun: west
Modifier: west
pajan
Etymology: Tagalog bayan 'town'.
Noun: city, town, village, municipality
Modifier: urban
pakala
Etymology: Tok Pisin bagarap ‘accident’, ultimately from English bugger up.
Noun: blunder, accident, mistake, destruction, damage, breaking
Verb: to break, to botch, to ruin, to hurt, to injure, to damage, to spoil, to fall apart, to curse
Modifier: botched, broken, damaged, harmed, messed up
Particle: curse
pake
Etymology: English block.
Noun: stop, halt
Verb: to stop, to block the way
Modifier: stopped
palanta
Etymology: Lithuanian valanda 'hour'.
Noun: hour, o'clock
pali
Etymology: Esperanto fari ‘do, make’, ultimately from Italian fare & French faire.
Noun: activity, work, deed, project
Verb: to do, to take action on, to work on, to build, to make, to prepare, to create, to act, to function
Modifier: active, work-related, operating, working
palisa
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian palica палица ‘bat, rod, cane’.
Noun: long hard thing, branch, rod, stick
Modifier: straight
pan
Etymology: Romance pan ‘bread’ & Japanese パン pan, ultimately from Portuguese pão.
Noun: cereal, grain, bread, pasta
pana
Etymology: Finnish panna ‘put, set, place’ or Swahili pana ‘give to each other’.
Noun: giving, transfer, gift
Pre-verb: to cause
Verb: to give, to send, to emit, to provide, to put, to release
pasila
Etymology: French facile ‘easy’.
Noun: simplicity
Verb: to simplify
Modifier: easy, simple
pata
Etymology: Russian брат brat 'brother'.
Noun: brother, sister, sibling
pesoni
Etymology: Esperanto bezoni 'need, require'.
Noun: need
Pre-verb: must, should, to need to
Verb: to need, to require
Modifier: necessary
peta
Etymology: Esperanto verda ‘green’.
Noun: nature
Verb: to remove dirt
Modifier: green, clean, not contaminated, decent, appropiate, natural, ecofriendly
pi
Etymology: Tok Pisin bilong ‘of’, ultimately from English belong.
Particle: used to divide a second noun group that describes a first noun group
pilin
Etymology: Tok Pisin pilim ‘feel’, from pil (from English feel) + -im ‘(transitive suffix)’ (from English him, ’em).
Noun: heart (physical or emotional), feeling (an emotion, a direct experience)
Verb: to feel, to think (a thougt)
pimeja
Etymology: Finnish pimeä ‘dark’.
Noun: darkness, shadows
Verb: to darken
Modifier: black, dark, unlit
pini
Etymology: French fini ‘finished, completed’ & Tok Pisin pinis ‘(perfective aspect)’, ultimately from English finish.
Noun: past, end, tip
Verb: to finish, to close, to end, to turn off
Modifier: completed, ended, finished, past, ago
pipi
Etymology: Acadian French bibitte ‘bug’.
Noun: bug, insect, ant, spider
po
Etymology: English four.
Numeral: four
poka
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian boka бока, genitive of bok бок ‘side, flank’.
Noun: hip, side, vicinity
Modifier: next to, nearby, around
poki
Etymology: Tok Pisin bokis ‘box’, ultimately from English box.
Noun: container, bag, bowl, box, cup, cupboard, drawer, vessel
Verb: to contain, to lock
Modifier: contained, locked
pona
Etymology: Esperanto bona ‘good’.
Noun: good, positivity
Verb: to fix, to repair, to make good
Modifier: good, positive, useful, friendly, peaceful, fixed
powe
Etymology: French faux ‘false’.
Noun: trick
Verb: to pretend, to trick, to deceive
Modifier: pretend, false, unreal
pu
Etymology: Toki pona pu, ultimately from English book.
Modifier: orthodox, conservative, conventional, official, canon
pume
Etymology: French fumer 'smoke'.
Noun: smoke, steam, tobacco
Verb: to smoke, to steam
sama
Etymology: Finnish sama ‘same’ (from PG *samaz ‘same, alike’) & Esperanto sama ‘same’ (from English same).
Noun: each other, peer, fellow, equality
Modifier: same, similar, equal, fellow
san
Etymology: Mandarin 三 sān 'three'.
Numeral: three
sanke
Etymology: Italian sangue 'blood'.
Noun: blood, bodily fluid, sap
Verb: to bleed
sano
Etymology: Nepali सानो sānō 'small, little, inferior'.
Verb: to shorten, to shrink
Modifier: little, small, short
se
Etymology: shona se 'as'.
Preposition: as, like
sekunte
Etymology: German Sekunde, 'second'.
Noun: second
seli
Etymology: Georgian ცხელი cxeli ‘hot’.
Noun: fire, heat, cooking element, chemical reaction, heat source, warmth
Verb: to heat, to warm up, to cook
Modifier: hot, warm, cooked
selo
Etymology: Esperanto ŝelo ‘skin, peel’, ultimately from German Schale ‘peel, husk, shell’.
Noun: outer form, outer layer, bark, peel, shell, skin, leather, boundary, touch
Verb: to touch
seme
Etymology: Mandarin 什麼 shénme ‘what, something’.
Particle: what? which?
sewi
Etymology: Georgian ზევით zevit ‘upwards’.
Noun: area above, highest part, top, something elevated, sky, heaven
Verb: to raise, to hoist
Modifier: high, up, above, top, over, superior, elevated, formal, awe-inspiring, divine, sacred, religious, supernatural
si
Etymology: sina without the termination na.
Noun: you (singular)
Modifier: your (singular)
sijelo
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian tijelo тијело ‘body’.
Noun: body (of person or animal), torso, physical state
sike
Etymology: English circle.
Noun: ball, circle, cycle, sphere, round or circular thing
Verb: to rotate
Modifier: round, circular, cyclical
sin
Etymology: Mandarin 新 xīn ‘new, fresh’.
Verb: to renew, to renovate, to freshen
Modifier: new, fresh, additional, another, extra, more
sina
Etymology: Finnish sinä ‘you’.
Noun: you (plural)
Modifier: your (plural)
sinko
Etymology: Bulgarian синко sinko 'son'.
Noun: son, daughter
sinpin
Etymology: Cantonese 前邊 tsin bin ‘in front’.
Noun: face, front, wall
Modifier: foremost, front
sitelen
Etymology: Dutch schilderen ‘paint’.
Noun: image, picture, representation, symbol, mark, writing
Verb: to write, to draw
Modifier: written, drawn
siten
Etymology: Dutch zitten 'to sit'.
Noun: sit, chair, seat
Verb: to sit
soko
Etymology: Georgian სოკო sok’o ‘mushroom”.
Noun: fungus, fungi
sona
Etymology: Georgian ცოდნა codna ‘knowledge’.
Noun: knowledge, wisdom, intelligence, understanding, science
Pre-verb: to know how to
Verb: to know, to be skilled in, to be wise about, to have information on, to understand
soto
Etymology: Swahili shoto ‘left side’.
Noun: the left side
Modifier: left (directional)
soweli
Etymology: Georgian ცხოველი cxoveli ‘beastly animal, lively, passionate’.
Noun: animal, beast, land mammal
suli
Etymology: Finnish suuri ‘big, large, great’.
Modifier: big, heavy, large
suno
Etymology: Esperanto suno ‘sun’.
Noun: sun, light, brightness, glow, radiance, shine, light source
Verb: to light, to glow, to shine
Modifier: light, bright
supa
Etymology: Esperanto surfaco ‘surface’, ultimately from French & English surface.
Noun: horizontal surface, thing to put or rest something on, floor
Verb: to lie (down)
supi
Etymology: Ukrainian зуби zuby 'teeth'.
Noun: tooth, bite
Verb: to bite
sute
Etymology: Esperanto sude 'south'.
Noun: south
Modifier: south
suwi
Etymology: Tok Pisin suwi, ultimately from English sweet.
Noun: candy, sweet food
Verb: to sweeten
Modifier: sweet, fragrant, cute, innocent, adorable
talika
Etymology: Bengali তালিকা talika 'list, chart, table'.
Noun: list, series
talili
Etymology: Tagalog daliri 'finger, toe, mentioning things one by one'.
Noun: finger, toe, count
Verb: to count
tan
Etymology: Cantonese 從 tsung ‘from’.
Preposition: by, from, because of, since
tana
Etymology: Swahili dhana 'concept'.
Noun: concept, believe, thought, metaphor
tanse
Etymology: French danse 'dance'.
Noun: dance, jump
Verb: to dance, to jump
taso
Etymology: Tok Pisin tasol ‘just, only, but, however’, ultimately from English that’s all.
Modifier: only, sole
Particle: but, however
tawa
Etymology: English towards.
Noun: movement
Pre-verb: to be going to
Verb: to move, to walk, to travel, to leave, to displace
Modifier: moving, mobile
te
Etymology: Mandarin chinese 的 de, relative clause marker.
Particle: relative clause marker
telo
Etymology: Acadian French de l’eau ‘(some) water’.
Noun: water, liquid, juice, sauce, fluid, wet substance, beverages
Verb: to water, to wash
ten
Etymology: English ten.
Numeral: ten
tenpo
Etymology: Esperanto tempo ‘time’, ultimately from Latin tempus.
Noun: time, duration, moment, occasion, period, situation
tima
Etymology: Thai ที่มา thī̀mā 'source, origin, provenance'.
Noun: origin, cause, source, root, spring
titi
Etymology: swahili titi 'teat'.
Noun: chest, breast, teat, nipple
tiwata
Etymology: Samoan tioata 'glass'.
Noun: glass, cup, china
Modifier: transparent
toki
Etymology: Tok Pisin tok, ultimately from English talk.
Noun: language, talking, speech, communication
Verb: to communicate, to say, to speak, to talk, to chat, to use language
Modifier: verbal
tolu
Etymology: Estonian toru 'pipe'.
Noun: pipe, tube
tomo
Etymology: Esperanto domo ‘house’, ultimately from Polish dom, Latin domus, Ancient Greek δόμος.
Noun: building, home, house
Verb: to tame, to domesticate
Modifier: domestic, household
tonsi
Etymology: Mandarin 同志 tóngzhì ‘comrade (same will/purpose); LGBT+’.
Modifier: trans, gender-non-conforming, non-binary
tu
Etymology: English two & Esperanto du.
Noun: duo, pair
Verb: to double
Numeral: two
tuntin
Etymology: Arabic تمطر tumtir 'rain'.
Noun: rain, hail, shower
Verb: to rain, to hail
ulokan
Etymology: Tamil உலோகம் ulōkam 'metal'.
Noun: metal, hardness
Modifier: hard, metallic
ulun
Etymology: Basque urrun 'far, distant, apart'.
Noun: that
Modifier: that, far, distant, apart, there, at that time
umami
Etymology: Japanese うま味 umami 'umami'.
Noun: meat, muscle
Modifier: umami (flavor)
umi
Etymology: Japanese 海 umi 'ocean'.
Noun: ocean, sea, lake
Modifier: oceanic, maritime
umojo
Etymology: Chichewa umoyo 'health'.
Noun: health, medicine
Modifier: healthy, medicinal, medical
unpa
Etymology: onomatopoeia.
Noun: sex, sexuality
Verb: to have sexual relations
Modifier: erotic, sexual
uta
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian уста usta ‘mouth’.
Noun: mouth, lips, oral cavity, jaw
Verb: to kiss
Modifier: oral
utala
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian ударати udarati ‘strike, hit, hurt’.
Noun: battle, challenge, conflict, disharmony, competition, fight, war, attack, blow, argument, physical or verbal violence
Verb: to battle, to challenge, to compete against, to struggle against, to fight, to hit, to strike, to attack
Modifier: violent, bellicose
wa
Etymology: Hawaiian hua 'egg, seed'.
Noun: egg, seed, pregnacy, semen
waleja
Etymology: Quenya valdea ‘of moment, important’.
Noun: context, topic, salience
Verb: to pertain to, to be relevant to
Modifier: pertinent, topical
walo
Etymology: Finnish valko- ‘white’.
Modifier: white, whitish, light-coloured, pale
wan
Etymology: English one.
Verb: to make one, to unite
Modifier: unique, united
Numeral: one
waso
Etymology: French oiseau ‘bird’.
Noun: bird, flying creature, winged animal
Verb: to fly
wawa
Etymology: Finnish vahva ‘strong, powerful, thick’.
Noun: energy, strength, power
Verb: to strengthen, to energize, to empower
Modifier: strong, powerful, confident, sure, energetic, intense, fierce
wawasa
Etymology: Chichewa (wo)wawasa 'sour'.
Noun: acid, vinegar
Modifier: sour
weka
Etymology: Dutch weg ‘away, gone’.
Noun: absence
Verb: to throw away, to remove, to get rid of
Modifier: absent, away, ignored, missing
wetu
Etymology: Māori whetū ‘star’.
Noun: star, celestial body
wiki
Etymology: Hawaiian wikiwiki 'fast'.
Modifier: fast, quick, quickly
wile
Etymology: Dutch willen ‘want, desire'.
Noun: desire, will
Pre-verb: to want to, to wish to, to desire to
Verb: to want, to wish, to desire
woka
Etymology: Malagasy vovoka 'dust'.
Noun: powder, dust, sand