But
You can join two things with and and or (Lesson 28). Now the word that does the opposite — sets two thoughts against each other.
1 · Say this
mi pai, ne mi no oli(mee · PAI · ... · neh · mee · noh · OH-lee) I'm okay, but I'm not happy.
Everything here you know — mi pai (I'm well, Lesson 3), mi no oli (I'm not happy,
from oli in Lesson 19 with the flip-word no, Lesson 3). The one new piece is ne — but.
It marks the turn: you say one thing, then push back with another.
2 · A closer look: ne joins whole thoughts
| Amatu | Says | Means |
|---|---|---|
ne |
"neh" | but / however |
Here's the difference from Lesson 28. i (and) and o (or) join words inside one
thought — iya i pita. ne joins two whole statements that pull against each other, and
it sits after a comma — you finish one thought, pause, then turn:
mi ama tu, ne tu no ama mi— I love you, but you don't love me.
mi fia ni, ne mi no pai— I want this, but I'm not well.
Notice the second half is its own complete statement, often carrying its own no.
🧭 Why it's built this way
i and o are joiners inside a thought; ne is a hinge between thoughts. That's why it
needs the comma — the little pause is the sound of the sentence turning a corner. Say the
first part, let it land, then ne and the reversal.
⚠️ Watch out
Keep ne ("neh") and no ("noh") apart — they do different jobs and often sit side by side.
ne joins two thoughts in contrast; no negates. In ne mi no oli you can hear both at
work: but (ne) ... not (no) happy.
💛 The feeling
mi ama tu, ne tu no ama mi says the unsayable thing cleanly: both are true at once — the
love and its going-unanswered — and Amatu lets you hold them in one breath without softening
either. Naming a complicated feeling exactly, instead of rounding it off, is the whole reason
this language exists.
3 · Your turn
Out loud:
- I'm okay, but I'm not happy →
mi pai, ne mi no oli - I love you, but you don't love me →
mi ama tu, ne tu no ama mi - I want this, but I'm not well →
mi fia ni, ne mi no pai - Make your own: say one true thing, then
neand its honest opposite.
4 · Tonight's phrase
mi pai, ne mi no oli— I'm okay, but I'm not happy. One small word holds the turn.
30-second check
Cover the page. (1) Say I'm okay, but I'm not happy. (2) Say I love you, but you don't love
me. (3) Say how ne (but) differs from i/o — it hinges two whole thoughts, not two
words. Three for three? You can now say two things that pull against each other, and mean
both.
⬅️ Back: Lesson 30 — Recap · ➡️ Next: Lesson 32 — Dog and cat
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