pili

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1 Part of speech, core meaning, sentence position, and example sentences

  • Part of speech
    • Verb (root): pili — “to choose, select, pick”
    • Common noun: pili — “choice, selection”
  • Sentence-position rule
    A conjugated pili form normally heads the predicate; any clitic actor-pronoun follows it: Mo-pili ko sa labing maayo.
    I will choose the best.
  • Example sentences Cebuano sentence English translation Mo-pili ko ug prutas sa merkado ugma. I will choose fruit at the market tomorrow. Nag-pili sila sa menu karon. They are choosing from the menu now. Gi-pilian sa HR ang tulo ka kandidato. Three candidates were selected by HR.

2 Verb derivations of pili

FormVoice & aspectTypical translationSample sentence
mag-piliActor focus, habitual / future“will regularly choose / usually choose”Mag-pili sila ug tema kada meeting. — They choose a theme at every meeting.
mo-piliActor focus, non-past / imperative“will choose; choose!”Mo-pili ta karon, ha. — Let’s choose now, okay.
nag-piliActor focus, progressive / recent past“is / was choosing”Nag-pili ko pag-abot nimo. — I was choosing when you arrived.
ni-pili / mi-piliActor focus, completed past“chose”Ni-pili siya ug kurso kagahapon. — She chose a course yesterday.
gi-piliPatient focus, completed past“was chosen (by …)”Gi-pili sa komite ang nag-unang disenyo. — The leading design was chosen by the committee.
pilion (-on)Patient focus, future / imperativeto be chosen / choose it”Pilion nato ang pinakamaayo. — Let us choose the best one.
pilian (-an)Beneficiary / locative focusto choose for someone / choose amongPilia ko palihog og regalo. — Please choose a gift for me.

3 Common phrases

  • pili sa kandidato — choose a candidate
  • mag-pili og kolor — select a color
  • walay pili — no preference
  • gi-pili sa publiko — chosen by the public
  • pilion nga opsyon — option to be selected

4 Detailed usage notes

  1. Actor-focus forms (mo-/nag-/ni-pili) emphasize the chooser.
  2. Object markers — use sa for definite choices (mo-pili ko sa jacket), og/ug for indefinite (nag-pili ug libro).
  3. Patient focus (gi-pili, pilion) highlights what is chosen.
  4. Beneficiary focus (pilian, pilii) stresses for whom you choose: pilian siya “choose for her.”
  5. Noun sensepili as “choice”: lisod ang pili — “the choice is hard.”
  6. Reduplicationpili-pili can imply browsing or hesitating among options.

5 Common mistakes & how to avoid them

MistakeIssueCorrect form
Mo-pili ako ug sapatos.Clitic pronoun misplaced.Mo-pili ko ug sapatos.
Gi-pili ko ang libro.With gi-, actor must be genitive (ni / sa).Gi-pili ni ko ang libro.
Pilion ta siya!Beneficiary/locative command needs pilii.Pilii siya!
Nag-pili sa kolorMissing actor pronoun.Nag-pili ko sa kolor.

6 Short everyday conversations

  1. A: Unsa imong pilion nga dessert? — Which dessert will you choose?
    B: Mo-pili ko ug leche flan. — I’ll choose leche flan.
  2. A: Nag-pili na ba ka sa imong subjects? — Have you chosen your subjects yet?
    B: Oo, human na ko nag-pili kagahapon. — Yes, I finished choosing yesterday.
  3. A: Pilia palihog ang labing barato nga tiket. — Please choose the cheapest ticket.
    B: Sige, akong tan-awon online. — Sure, I’ll check online.
  4. A: Ni-pili ka og neutral nga kolor? — Did you choose a neutral color?
    B: Oo, para bagay sa tanan. — Yes, so it matches everything.
  5. A: Mag-pili pa ta og venue ugma? — Shall we choose a venue tomorrow?
    B: Oo, aron maka-reserve ta dayon. — Yes, so we can reserve right away.
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