Okuna: Difference between revisions
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|colspan="2" bgcolor="#CCCCCC" color="#000000" align="center" |<font color="#000000"><big>''' | |colspan="2" bgcolor="#CCCCCC" color="#000000" align="center" |<font color="#000000"><big>'''Okuna'''</big></font> | ||
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|valign="top"|Spoken in: | |valign="top"|Spoken in: | ||
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|valign="top"|Genealogical classification: | |valign="top"|Genealogical classification: | ||
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''' | '''Okuna''' | ||
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|valign="top"|Basic word order: | |valign="top"|Basic word order: | ||
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'''Tokana''' is a [[naturalist artlang]] by Matthew Pearson, an American linguist. | '''Okuna''' (formerly known as '''Tokana''') is a [[naturalist artlang]] by Matthew Pearson, an American linguist. | ||
Okuna was the winner of [[User:Dedalvs|David J. Peterson]]'s [[Smiley Award]] in 2011. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Latest revision as of 05:44, 31 January 2021
Okuna | |
Spoken in: | northwestern North America |
Timeline/Universe: | unknown |
Total speakers: | ca. 35,000 |
Genealogical classification: | language isolate Okuna |
Basic word order: | VSO, free |
Morphological type: | agglutinating |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | fluid-S |
Created by: | |
Matthew Pearson |
Okuna (formerly known as Tokana) is a naturalist artlang by Matthew Pearson, an American linguist.
Okuna was the winner of David J. Peterson's Smiley Award in 2011.
External links
- Tokana Reference Grammar (old site)
- current site