Appendix:Toki Pona/mi

Glyph origin
The sitelen pona glyph may be representing a hand pointing towards the speaker. Compare,.

Etymology
From, from Romance languages.

Pronoun

 * 1) ; I, me; we, us

Adjective

 * 1) my, mine; our, ours

Usage notes

 * When the subject is only mi or only, the following is dropped.
 * Use of li between additional predicates varies. Some speakers use li in all instances but the first. Others prefer to start a new sentence, repeating mi as the subject.
 * When number must be specified, mi , mi , mi , and similar words are commonly used.