meaning
man, male, husband, boyfriend
see also
semantic space · lipamanka
The semantic space of mije contains men and masculinity. The semantic space of meli contains women and femininity. These words are as well defined as the concepts they represent, so it's left intentionally broad without specifying further. This means that for beings that can talk to you, they decide if they fit within the semantic space of either of these words.
A common question is "can mije and meli be used to refer to biological sex?" The answer is extremely complicated. First, it's worth unpacking the concept of biological sex, which I'm not going to do here. (If you want to learn more about that, research "intersex.") That can inform the ethics of using mije and meli to talk about biological sex. As for trans people, they usually identify their bodies with their gender and not their biological sex at birth. That doesn't mean that no trans person has ever said something along the lines of "my body is mije, but I am meli" to explain their transness. It's up to the individual to decide how they want to identify. For example, it is incredibly disrespectful to use mije to describe the body or any attribute of someone who does not identify under that word if you haven't cleared it with them first, and even asking them if it's okay is, at the very least, a little weird. (The same goes for meli as well as tonsi.) There are quite a few trans members of the toki pona community, so this matters a lot.
ku translations
male94, man90, husband55, cisgender man50, sir35, boyfriend29, guy29, gentleman24, transgender man18
pu verbatim
NOUN man, male, masculine person; husband
usage
common · 82% usage
found in pu
coined pre-pu
origin
Finnish · mies ‘man, husband’
coined by jan Sonja
sitelen pona
mije mije2head radical with perhaps wide shoulders. compare jan
sitelen sitelen
sitelen jelo
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sitelen Emosi
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ucsur
U+F1935