Appendix: quick reference

One-page summary

The basic structure

[rena CLAUSE] NOUN

In a full sentence

[rena CLAUSE NOUN] MAIN-VERB

or

SUBJECT [rena CLAUSE NOUN] MAIN-VERB

Key facts

FeaturePhiEnglish
PositionPre-nominal (clause before noun)Post-nominal (noun before clause)
MarkerSingle rena for all caseswho, whom, which, that, where, when...
CloserNone needed (noun closes clause)None (but can sprawl)
GapPosition indicates roleRelative pronoun indicates role

The gap positions

Subject gap: The head noun is the doer

rena ___ nophi kealo miona
"the person who creates stories"

Object gap: The head noun is the receiver

rena mia ___ to theo shelu
"the book that I read"

Oblique gap: The head noun fills a prepositional phrase; the preposition stays and its object is gapped

rena mia mua ___ to thalo shelira
"the forest that I walked in"

Headless relatives

When the noun is implied:

rena lothea shelomui phue nai
"one who understands love is wise"

rena can sometimes be omitted if structure is clear:

lothea shelomui phue nai

What rena is NOT

Checklist


Glossary

Complementizer: A function word that introduces a subordinate clause. In Phi: rena, mena/meno, shola/sholo, wela/welo.

Gap: The empty position inside a relative clause where the head noun would appear if it were a normal sentence.

Head noun: The noun being described by the relative clause. In Phi, it appears at the end of the clause.

Headed relative clause: A relative clause with an explicit head noun: "the book that I read."

Headless relative clause: A relative clause without an explicit head noun: "what I read" or "one who reads."

Post-nominal: Placed after the noun. English relative clauses are post-nominal.

Pre-nominal: Placed before the noun. Phi relative clauses are pre-nominal.

Relative clause: A clause that functions as a modifier, describing a noun by relating it to a situation or action.

Relativizer: A word that introduces a relative clause. In Phi: rena. In English: who, which, that, etc.

Relative pronoun: A pronoun that introduces a relative clause and stands in for the head noun inside it. English uses these; Phi does not.


Common vocabulary in examples

PhiGlossMeaning
mionapersonperson
shelubookbook
nophistorystory
peloruflowerflower
shirotreetree
sheliraforestforest
thepalugardengarden
womuhomehome
ruelapathpath
lopiachildchild
kealocreatecreate
theoreadread
nilaseesee
haoluspeakspeak
heahearhear
thumelateachteach
lothealovelove
sanoknowknow
shelomuiunderstandunderstand
thuroagrowgrow
naphehelphelp
howelareceivereceive
shuacomecome
kamoarrivearrive (at a place, with mua)
thalowalkwalk
phelorabeautifulbeautiful
phuewisewise
seraooldold
whalolargelarge
sonualonealone
sheapeacepeace
muaLOCin, at
niaonon
weiDATto, for (recipient)
kauALLto (goal of motion)
weaTOWARDtoward (without arrival)
toPSTpast tense
soFUTfuture tense
maNEGnegation

Cross-reference to main manual

This pamphlet expands on Chapter 20: Relative Clauses in the Phi manual.

Related chapters: - Chapter 9: The Particle System, how particles work in relative clauses - Chapter 13: Pronouns, topic-drop and when subjects can be omitted - Chapter 19: Subordinate Clauses, complementizers mena/meno, shola/sholo, wela/welo

Related grammar documents: - complementizer_reference.md, full reference for all complementizers including rena


Further practice

After completing this pamphlet:

  1. Re-read Chapter 20 in the main manual
  2. Find relative clauses in the example texts throughout the manual
  3. Practice translating simple English relative clauses daily
  4. Try writing a journal entry in Phi using relative clauses
  5. Listen for (or imagine) how Japanese handles relatives: same pre-nominal structure

Pre-nominal relative clauses are ordinary grammar for speakers of Japanese, Korean, and Turkish. Phi asks nothing that hundreds of millions of people do not already do.

‹ Part 7: Practice exercisesall pamphlets