Talk:Indonesian language
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[edit] it has come into being
officially it came into being in 1945
How exactly does a language officially come into being? Could there be more information on how the language was developed here? Thanks. --Chuck Smith
- There are number hjhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh of people from organization like "Young Java", "young Celebes", "Bond Sumatra", and so on who take oath in 1928 that they will use Indonesian (Malay?) Language from then. Dutch official also use this language as lingua franca to communicate with natives, as native officer not allowed to talk in Dutch Language with Dutch Officer (In some part of Dutch East Indies, but I just sure about that in Java). So its has a long history before became official.Aditthegrat 17:06, 15 May 2006 (UTC)
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- Yup.. Read James T. Collin's Malay, World Language: a short history if you want to know more. in 20s, the form of Indonesian Language and Malay Language was same. Then, due to the area become two separated countries, both of language start to differ. However, most of Indonesian I met can understand Malaysian Malay while I heard Malaysian hardly understand Indonesian (needed to checked). Kunderemp 19:23, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
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- Yes, I believe the oath you are referring to is the 'Sumpah Pemuda', which has its own article in Wikipedia so you can fish through to find it. Being Indonesian, I have had a hard time understanding spoken Malaysian Malay mainly because of its accent and pronounciation (I have managed to understand 95% of the vocab though). Conversely, Malaysians are probably in a greater disadvantage because Indonesia has the 'prokem' or slang, which is a very.. complex language that throw foreigners off guard.
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- (I've heard Malaysian slang but definitely not as deviant as prokem:) e-no 21:30, 5 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] so sayeth the article
The article says:
- There are six pure vowel sounds: a (similar to the sound in bus), e (as in get), i (shorter than in eat), o (shorter than in dawn), u (as in put), and a neutral vowel like the second vowel of water which is also spelled e; and three diphthongs (ai, au, oi). The consonantic phonemes are rendered by the letters p, b, t, d, k, g, c (pronounced like the ch in cheese), j, h, ng (which also occurs initially), ny (as in canyon), m, n, s (unvoiced, as in sun or cats), w, l, r (trilled or flapped) and y. There are five more consonants that only appear in loanwords: f, v, sy (pronounced sh), z and kh (as in loch).
Would it be accurate to abstract the following phonological tables from the above (using SAMPA notation)?
Bilabial | Dental | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
Stops | Voiceless | p | t | k | ||
Voiced | b | d | g | |||
Affricates | Voiceless | tS | ||||
Voiced | dZ | |||||
Fricatives | s | h | ||||
Nasals | m | n | J | N | ||
Lateral | l | |||||
Rhotic | r | |||||
Semivowels | w | y |
Front | Central | Back | |
High | i | u | |
Mid | e | @ | o |
Low | a |
Please advise, as if the above is correct, I'd like to add it to the article after the description of the orthography. Thanks!
-- pgdudda 03:43 Dec 31, 2002 (UTC)
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- I think the postalveolar affricate is actually palatal stops (which makes c instead of tS, and J/ instead of dZ) unless at the end of words, but then, no Indonesian words I know end with either "c" or "j". Also, most dialect of Indonesian seems to use trilled /r/ unable to do a trilled /r/ is considered a mild speech defect.
-- Pyurio 04:11, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] when
When Bahasa Indonesia was made from Malay, was there any attempt made to reduce the levels of social coding, politeness levels, and respectful/deferential/colloquial/abrupt forms that were present in the language originally? -- Smerdis of Tlön 14:30, 7 Oct 2003 (UTC)
- I believe there was no such attempt. But in some areas, using their local language is rude while using Indonesian is preferable in formal situation. For example, in where I live, Jakarta, it is rude using Betawi Language to parents (Betawi = Jakarta People -> from Batavia). Then, "Gue mau makan" ( 'Gue' from Betawi Language) is a impolite sentence of "Saya mau makan" (means "I want to eat"). Kunderemp 20:14, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] wikipedia policy
It seems that Wikipedia policy is to [English] words. Bahasa Indonesia is the is the Indonesian name of the language. In English we use "Indonesian". The ISO 639 English name for the language is "Indonesian". Therefore this article should be moved to Indonesian language. --Nohat 17:16, 2004 Feb 25 (UTC)
Indonesian is not a language, its a dialect of Malay. Am I Wrong? -Pedro 13:22, 22 May 2004 (UTC)
- Well, it's debatable. But it is usually considered to be a separate language because it has a separate written standard, it has government-supported language planners supporting its use, and it is the national language of Indonesia (not Malay). Nohat 14:37, 2004 May 22 (UTC)
- Althought it's debatable. Althought it was historically correct. But I don't think there will be a Malay or Indonesian who will consider modern Indonesian language as only a purely dialect of Malay. Kunderemp 20:18, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
- But linguistically it is a variant of Malay, just as Brazilian Portuguese is a mere variant of Portuguese for example. Meursault2004 12:52, 11 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] PURI Bahasa
I am interested in learning bahasa Indonesia. I have a friend who recommend me to study in a school in Yogyakarta, called PURI Bahasa. He really likes the school, but I want to get more information about Indonesian language schools in Indonesia, particularly in Yogyakarta.
Does anyone have information about PURI bahasa? Is this really good, or is there any other you know?
Salam
Ken
Ken - the url for Puri Bahasa is http://www.puri.co.id/. A friend of mine studied there and spoke very highly of it. It is probably the best known Indonesian language school in the country.--Kutu 08:32, 1 Sep 2004 (UTC)
The table says there are ~150 million speakers... the article says ~200 million. Someone who knows should pick the right one! --anon
- Those extra people must be somewhere... did you check behind the sofa? -- 66.32.73.115 21:57, 24 Dec 2004 (UTC)
[edit] Mistake
Why does the article state that Indonesian is ranked 56th in the world, behind Malay which is ranked 54th? According to the Indonesian language article, 140 million people speak Indonesian. According to the Malay language article, only 7-18 million people speak Malay.
- Given that Bahasa Indonesia (which should be the title of the page - this is how it is known in English - there are 570,000 English language hits for Bahasa Indonesia) is essentially a dialect of Malay, one would assume that the Malay number was arrived at by adding the number of Bahasa Indonesia speakers to the number of standard Malay speakers. john k 16:38, 26 Jan 2005 (UTC)
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- I think it is almost a political argument really. To say that Indonesian is a dialect of Malay is clearly historically correct, but by weight of numbers it is clearly not an accurate representation of reality.
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- I have no information to dispute the 7% native speakers, but I would be surprised if the 45% fluent is accurate. It may have changed recently, but when I lived there, all education from Grade 3 up was in Indonesian. I guess many rural children don't go past primary education, but still I would be surprised if the number of fluent speakers is only 45%. Of course I only ever lived in cities, so I have no personal experience of the situation in the villages. --Peacenik 03:38, 27 Jan 2005 (UTC)
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- I believe there is no such thing as "native speaker of Indonesia". As Peacenik said, we start to speak Indonesian since we can speak. The second thing is, most of population in Indonesia is in Java (more than 50%) and all of Javanese (except the Bedouin) speak Indonesian as their first language. Well.. actually it is hard to say whether Javanese or Indonesian as their first language (lot of Javanese, especially the young generation, speaks Indonesian more fluently than Javanese [althought their Indonesian have Javanese accent]).
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- Thirdly, I met some people from Papua and Borneo and they speaks Indonesian better than Javanese . Some people explained to me, if Papuan can't speak Indonesia, they won't be able to communicate with people outside their tribes. FYI, there are lot of tribes (such as Dani, Asmat, etc) and languages in Papua and they are isolated from each other. The only way to communicate with other (even Papuan) tribes is using Indonesian Language.
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- Fourthly, even you still consider all of us, Indonesian, are using Indonesian as our second language, then there won't be any native, not even Riau (They speak Malay, not Indonesian). So, can I erase the "native" stuff? Kunderemp 19:44, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
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- I'm confused; the only 45% number I see is saying that 45% of people in Malaysia speak Malay natively; which doesn't seem too relevant here, but no big deal. What am I missing? Anyway, the Indonesian census has questions about language use, which might help clear things up, if someone is interested. However last I checked little of the census results were online - you might need to find the paper volumes (in a university library) to get the good stuff.
- On the naming of the article: I'd suggest we keep it at Indonesian language, not "Bahasa Indonesia". The English term - Indonesian language - is very widely used. Ethnologue calls it "Indonesian", and a majority of the English-language sources it cites do as well. The current name is also in keeping with Wikipedia:Naming conventions (use English), which suggests that we should use English names for things, when reasonable. It would also fit with every other language article I'm aware of. I think the article handles it well; noting the name "Bahasa Indonesia", and that it is sometimes used in English as well. - Cdc 05:59, 27 Jan 2005 (UTC)
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- The ranking is very suspect. Note that the ranking page List of languages by number of native speakers has been nominated as inaccurate. Looks like a difficult question. Can someone find a more accurate & reliable estimate of the number of native speakers? Singkong2005 11:25, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] 10,000 Dutch loanwords
How can it be true that 10,000 loan words from Dutch are in use today in Indonesian? Is there a source for this comment, because the number will have to be changed. There's an Indonesia expert at The Ohio State University who laughed at this article and basically said the Wikipedia is terrible (I was very sad). Does anybody have something to add to this? NeonGeniuses 01:51, 24 May 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Notes
Firstly, the so-called OSU "expert" is apparently not much of one. Dutch words are entrenched all throughout Bahasa Indonesia, but they are not clearly recognizable because they are often a second incantation of borrowed words going further back to bahasa Jawa. However, because Bahasa Indonesia is today such a slang-oriented language, I suppose I would agree with the conclusion most of those words are not in use today.
Secondly, what is more laughable is the fact that this page says there are 17-30 million native speakers of Bahasa Indonesia. The majority of Javanese and Madurese (combined population is about 130 million) under the age of 30 are not fully fluent in bahasa Jawa or bahasa Madura. Their native tongue is Bahasa Indonesia, not to mention millions of other urbanites on Sumatra and Kalimantan who are native speakers of Bahasa Indonesia. The real number is probably closer to 50 million.
In light of these facts, it is unsurprising the the number of 140 million speakers of Bahasa Indonesia is also incorrect. The latest estimate says that Indonesia's population is 240 million. I know that the source often being used for these pages is Ethnologue, but I know of many instances of Ethnologue underestimating and overestimating the number of speakers of particular Papuan languages by at least 50%. In case some of you were under a bizarre impression by reading this page, Bahasa Indonesia is basically a trade language and generally takes about three months to learn. That is why about 80% of Indonesians are literate in the language, and there are about 190 million speakers of Bahasa Indonesia in Indonesia.
(Yamauchi)
- RE DUTCH WORDS: I would add that many of the English-sounding words like telepon, nasional and internasional presumably came from Dutch rather than from English.
- RE NUMBER OF NATIVE SPEAKERS: However I disagree with you regarding the fluency of young Javanese and Madurese speakers - "The majority of Javanese and Madurese... under the age of 30 are not fully fluent in bahasa Jawa or bahasa Madura." It depends what you mean. For all the Javanese I met in Surabaya, their most comfortable language is Javanese, and this is the language they use on a daily basis with friends and family, and often in informal street situations as well. In Surabaya, even Chinese people may speak Javanese at home. I think Madurese is also often used in Surabaya, when Madurese people recognise each other as Madurese (by clothing, physical appearance and/or occupation). (Most people in Surabaya don't seem to know the higher "kromo" levels of Javanese, but I don't know whether this is a generational change or just a local phenomenon. In Yogyakarta, it seems everyone, including the becak drivers, is able and eager to teach the more refined forms of Javanese.)
- However, most of their education has been in Indonesian. Their Javanese or Madurese is more fluent in most situations. Their Indonesian is more "educated", but while usually fluent enough, it feels also more stiff and formal than speaking their regional language.
- This is probably even more true outside the cities. However Jakarta is a special case, in having such a mix of ethnic groups. Regional languages seem to not be used so much, and those raised in Jakarta are not fluent in them. Instead they speak Indonesian and Jakarta slang.
- I can't comment on other areas, though the article on Padang says "It has a population of roughly 800,000 people, mostly speakers of the Minangkabau language".
- Re non-speakers: You say that "Indonesia's population is 240 million" and "about 80% of Indonesians are literate in the language, and there are about 190 million speakers of Bahasa Indonesia in Indonesia." You mean there are 50 million Indonesians who don't speak Indonesian? Are there large populations in the outer islands that don't speak Indonesian? In two years, mainly in Surabaya and with some travel elsewhere (incl Sulawesi and Madura), I only met one person who didn't speak Indonesian - and he was an old man in Madura who went to school before independence. I would have guessed the proportion of speakers would be much higher, but there may be some information I'm missing.
- Singkong 3 July 2005 11:13 (UTC)
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- Good points. You are probably correct on the Javanese/Madurese case. I think I simply took isolated cases and applied them over a wide area. Now that it's brought up, I remember meeting Madurese in Surabaya who spoke Javanese as their first language (they didn't know Madurese). I've been to Surabaya three times, but I have a bit of selective memory.
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- As for the number of Indonesian speakers, you are right too. I was using CIA numbers, but I was simply trying to point out that the page's number of "140 million" is very underprojected. I found an official Indonesian government source (Chamber of Commerce) that states 195 million Indonesians speak Indonesian. That number was published in 1997. With the increase in population, it must be around 210 million now. As to where the non-speakers are, I have no clue. I've only met one man in Indonesia who couldn't speak Indonesian (Javanese driver on the side of the road).
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- 24.124.61.165 02:39, 5 August 2005 (UTC)
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- It doesn't matter though..
- I speak Javanese (Kromo mix Ngoko) to my parents and even sometimes I deliberately use Javanese to annoy my girlfriend (a Javanese who can't speak Javanese). The question, if the Javanese cannot be considered as native speaker of Indonesian Language then I belive nobody can be considered as native speaker, not even Malay (which most of native know they are different although historically they were same).
- Can I just erase 'native' stuff? Kunderemp 19:53, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
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- One area where most people do not seem to speak Indonesian is the Badui tribal area, only about 150km from Jakarta, where they speak a dialect of Sundanese. They are allowed not to go to government schools so the kids miss out on learning Indonesian, for better or worse. My guide there, a village headman, spoke basic B.I. but others did not seem to. However this covers only a few thousand people at most. I have not met people elsewhere who cannot speak B.I. though I suppose there must be some in remote areas and especially older people in Irian/Papua. Rkidley 01:12, 6 December 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] Announcing Wikipedia:Indonesia-related topics notice board
After some thought and consideration, I created an Indonesia-related topics notice board, along the same lines as other regional notice boards (such as those for Malaysia and Africa). This was established to coordinate efforts to improve Indonesia-related Wikipedia entries. If you've made contributions to Indonesia-related articles in the past, or would like to, please take some time to visit, introduce yourself, and sign the roster. --Daniel June 30, 2005 18:35 (UTC)
[edit] The influence of regional languages (esp Javanese)
The article mentions Sanskrit as an influence on Indonesian, via Old Javanese. Is it only the Sanskrit elements that have entered Indonesian? I know plenty of Sanskrit is in Indonesian (surya, putri/putra, maha, gajah...) but what about Javanese words that aren't from Sanskrit, haven't quite a few of them entered as well? (This is an impression, but I've been away for 5 years and can't think of examples). I had assumed ngawur was a Javanese word, and it is certainly used in Javanese conversation in Surabaya, but Echols and Shadily's dictionary lists it as Indonesian, with no (Jv) next to it.
In this sentence: "However it does differ from the Malaysian form in some ways, with differences in pronunciation and also in vocabulary, due in large part to the many Dutch words in the Indonesian vocabulary." I think it would be correct to change "Dutch" to "Dutch and Old Javanese". Or perhaps "Dutch and Sanskrit", but I prefer "Old Javanese". I'll leave it to someone who knows this stuff.
kaca is given as an example of a Hindi word - is it from Hindi or Sanskrit? No examples are given for Sanskrit words.
I don't know the subject well enough to want to fix these myself.
Have other regional languages had much of an influence? I ask because the Minangkabau article seems to suggest that merantau is a Minang word - though whether Minang is the origin for the Indonesian word is not clear.
Singkong 6 July 2005 12:18 (UTC)
[edit] POV?
- Indonesian (Bahasa Indonesia) is the official language of Indonesia and a remarkable language in several ways. It is, in a sense, a very "modern" language officially it came into being only in 1945, and it is a dynamic language that is constantly absorbing new loanwords.
Is this introductory sentence POV, or at least not scientific? Thanks ~ Dpr 04:56, 30 August 2005 (UTC)
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- Well, it may be POV but you need expert to say it is not scientific. AFAIK, Indonesian Language does absorbing new loanwords (and it annoys lot of Indonesian expert in Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa Indonesia). It even does create new words (even me, a 24 years old Indonesian sometimes hard to understand teenager because they used new words while my mother, a 55 years old sometimes hard to understand me because I use some word that only understand by my generation [21-25]). Due to social-political unstability, some word had their meaning changed (most of them become pejorative). And penetration of national media-mass (especially media mass and television) made new words whose previously only limited to a community become widespread even to rural area. Kunderemp 20:04, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
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- Furthermore, Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa Indonesia also try to substitute such new word with "strange" new word (at least for me), which really annoys me. Such example are "transparansi" which unsuccessfully substituted by "beningan". Why don't just use "kertas mika" which are better known (at least for stationery merchants). Many scientist I know, describe this as immature nature of Indonesial language as English in early days which absorbed lots of loanwords from French, Latin, and another language. Draconins 15:29, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] are there measure words?
The Malay language article says that Malay has measure words. Does Indonesian? This seems quite important since most Malayo-Polynesian languages don't - and if Indonesian doesn't, it should be noted as one of the major differences between Indonesian and the Malay language. Gronky 17:58, 6 November 2005 (UTC)
- A month later: can anyone answer this?? Gronky 22:11, 12 December 2005 (UTC)
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- I assume this refers to words like piece of fruit or head of cattle. Indonesian does have words like this, but they don't seem to be essential - at least they aren't used for most nouns, in my experience of spoken Indonesian.
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- A more common term is classifier - you'll find more info by googling for e.g. "classifier indonesian buah"
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- See Indonesian Quantification Words and this Bahasa Malaysia lesson which looks consistent with Indonesian. --Singkong2005 02:21, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
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- Yes, Indonesian have measure words for example, five dogs can be translanted into "Lima ekor anjing" which literally means "Five tail dogs". "Ekor" is used as measurewords for animal.
This is not essential, though, and several local slang do bypass the Measure word.
- I disagree. Although most people nowadays seem to use buah for almost anything, there are still a number of such measure words or noun classifiers in common use such as biji (for seeds and round things), ekor (animals), batang (sticks, sigarettes, long things). Saying these words are not essential because local slang bypasses these words, is rubbish. Local slang isn't Bahasa Indonesia. MartijnL 14:30, 29 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] ConvertIPA?
A {{ConvertIPA}} tag has been added to this page. I don't speak Indonesian, but I speak another western malayo-polynesian language, and I wonder if Indonesian is really that difficult to pronounce. Is it not true that Indonesian uses only sounds that English speakers know? and that the most useful transcription would therefore be an English one? ...since more English speakers speak English than IPA :-) Gronky 14:06, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
- That's completely not the point. The point is that pronunciation in Wikipedia is indicated using the IPA. Just because the sounds of Indonesian happen to overlap with the sounds of the language that this wikipedia is written in is irrelevent. --86.135.179.53 03:48, 15 November 2005 (UTC)
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- Ok. I see that Wikipedia:Manual of Style (pronunciation) agrees with you. I'm not convinced of the wisdom of this policy for western malayo-polynesian languages, but I'm not concerned enough right now to raise this on the Manual of Style pages. Gronky 03:43, 16 November 2005 (UTC)
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- I agree with Gronky. It would be useful to have a guide for English speakers as well as the IPA. However, perhaps this would best be done using another site such as Wikibooks, which would then be linked from this section. Wikibooks would also be the best place for most of the text under "Here are a few useful tips for the learner".
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- I wrote the guide for British and Australian learners, as the original example for the schwa sound did assume an American accent. That's no longer relevant so I've removed my addition. --Singkong2005 01:46, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
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[edit] Spoken & informal Indonesian
I would like to see more info on spoken and informal Indonesian. Including:
- the ai on the end of base words is often pronounced as /e/.
- the me- is often dropped in verbs, although the transformed initial vowel is usually retained.
- the tendency to spell words phonetically in written personal communication and I perhaps also in some "trendy" media such as youth magazines (if my memory is correct). E.g.: capai becomes capek, pakai become pake, kalau becomes kalo.
- a brief description of some of the differences in word choice, sentence structure and flexibility between official Indonesian and the commonly spoken language.
However my experience is with Java, esp East Java and I could be simply reflecting pronunciation patterns there. Also, I realise that my experience alone does not meet the Wikipedia standard of verifiability.
A lot of things described as Indonesian slang language don't look like slang to me, but simply common usage. I'm not a linguist though, and am not too clear on the distinctions.
Also, I am unhappy with this section of the article:
- the degree of "correctness" of spoken Indonesian (in terms of grammar and vocabulary) by comparison to its written form is noticeably low. This is due to the fact that most Indonesians prefer to mix their own local dialects (Javanese, Sundanese, Balinese, and even Chinese) with Indonesian when speaking, which results in the creation of various types of accented Indonesian, the very types that a foreigner is most likely to hear upon arriving in any Indonesian city or town.
I don't think that's the only important reason. Indonesian seems to me to be a lot more flexible and expressive than the formal language. Partly this comes from dropping a lot of the requirements of the official language, such as classifiers (ekor, buah...). Sometimes spoken Indonesian changes word order for emphasis, which I doubt is allowed formal Indonesian (e.g. when speaking I think you could say "ada buku sepuluh" instead of "ada sepuluh buku", to emphasise that there's a lot of books). Just my observations.
I'd be surprised if common people ever spoke in that really correct Indonesian (Bahasa Indonesia baik dan benar) - I was told by a lecturer that the people who put together the guidelines for the official language were influenced by Dutch grammar. The formal language was an artificial construct. As such, it seems unfair to judge Indonesians' usage of their own language as being low in degree of "correctness". --Singkong2005 02:17, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
- There was someone who spoke Indonesian correctly ('Bahasa Indonesia yang baik dan benar'). It was Richard Gozney, a British Ambassador for Indonesia. I heard him in radio and I didn't realize he was foreigner. I was amazed by his diction and how he spoke Indonesian perfectly (without foreigner's accent at all). And when the interviewer mentioned his name and his job as British Ambassador, I really got shocked. No wonder in 2003 he got an award for "tokoh berbahasa Indonesia lisan terbaik" (best Indonesian language speaker). Kunderemp 18:34, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
Another thought on this:
- This is due to the fact that most Indonesians prefer to mix their own local dialects (Javanese, Sundanese, Balinese, and even Chinese) with Indonesian when speaking,
There are national patterns in informal language as well, including a widespread use of elements of Jakarta slang (lu = you, gue = me) no doubt due to national media. --Singkong2005 14:51, 8 January 2006 (UTC)
From my point of view, the dialect (Javanese, Malang, or even the slank Jakarta language) that influence the Indonesian language, still can be called "Indonesian Language", since it didn't change the language afterall. It only adds spice here and over there, to make informal conversation more lively. Because as long as there are teenagers in a nation, there will be a new slang words in every generation. But in formal usage, even in formal media such as newspaper, book, or journal, it still use a good Indonesian Language. Even though there is some places in the rural village that purely use a dialect language, or maybe a second mother-language such as Chinese (Mandarin) and English, it's not widely used. It's only most used when they are talking to their relatives or families, but not when they are talking with their friends or their bussiness partner. --Mightymartin 20 January 2006
[edit] 10,000 Europeans loanwords revisited
The one who proposed that there are 10,000 Dutch (and other European) loanwords was Prof. Dr. Jan W. de Vries from the Departement of Dutch in University of Leiden. He has made an extensive research in the European loanwords in Indonesian. He was also co-athour of the following book: European loan-words in Indonesian : a check-list of words of European origin in Bahasa Indonesia and traditional Malay together with C.D. Grijns and L. Santa Maria. Leiden : Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde. 1983. ISBN 9067180041. C.D. Grijns is already deceased but Prof. Dr. J. de Vries is still alive although he is retired (born 1937). Meursault2004 08:49, 20 January 2006 (UTC)
- The estimated numbers of loanwards will keep changing unless we make sure that there are proper references for these figures. (Now it reads "21,000 Arabic...and a staggering number of some 200 loanwords from Dutch." It's a mess.) Is the book you mention, European loan-words in Indonesian, the source of the 10,000 words claim, or is that elsewhere? Do you know of estimates given for other languages, and the sources of those estimates if different from the Dutch estimate?
[edit] Orang = man/person
According to the main page on the Indonesian language "There is no word like the English man that can refer both to a male person and to a human being in general." What about "orang"? A German for example, male or female, can say "saya orang jerman" - "I am a German person" or "I am German".
On the other hand using "man" in English to mean a human in general is historically valid but not acceptable to all, especially feminists.
Or I misunderstanding something here?
- Yes you are right. Perhaps we can correct that. Meursault2004 15:27, 21 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Dental sounds?
The article says:
t and d are dental
My own observation is that t is pronounced a long way forward (the tongue is almost as far forward as in the English th), whereas the d is a bit further back, barely touching the teeth. This seemed to be the main difference (as opposed to English, where the main or only difference is that t is voiced and d is unvoiced). This is based on my own experience, sitting down with a native speaker and learning to precisely copy her pronunciation. Is there a definitive answer on this? --Singkong2005 14:42, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
- I think it also may depend on where your native speaker comes from... A Jakartan will probably have another accent than someone from (e.g.) Sumatra or Maluku... About "t": forward but (in my experience) dental. As for "d": I'll have to check with my wife ;-) MartijnL 05:48, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Indonesian Wikibooks needs help!!!!!
I would just like to say this to anybody who has come to this wikipedia article and would like to help wikimedia:)... The wikibooks Indonesian language course at the moment is a bit useless in realistic terms, I viewed it some long months ago and noticed this fact however when I look back now it is the same state! I assume that the person who originally took up the initiative in now either too busy or unable to continue with the project, I am studying Indonesian at the moment but haven't been studying very long so I have a vested intrest in this article getting better:).
Anyway if anybody would like to do this wikibooks is really very much simular in user and creater interface, if you go to; [[1]] you will get lots of advice on how to create a wikibook teaching a language (if you are interested).
Thanks to anybody who is interested in taking a look.
- I'll try.. Kunderemp 18:41, 21 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Suriname : Indonesian or Javanese?
" Indonesian is also spoken by some people in East Timor, and in Suriname among that nation's large community of people of Indonesian descent. "
The majority of Indonesian decendents in Suriname are from Java, hence their principal language is Javanese. Citation needs to be given on the extent that Indonesian is spoken and/or understood in Suriname.
" In Suriname the Javanese is spoken in 17% of the home of Javanese families; Dutch 33%, and Sranantongo 28%. " (source)
Javanese, Dutch and Sranantongo. No mention of Bahasa Indonesia.
- Yes you're right. Indonesian is not spoken there, perhaps except by the staff of the Indonesian Embassy ... Meursault2004 06:09, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Conlang?!
I've heard this language called a Conlang, isn't this more like a Creole?Cameron Nedland 21:57, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
- It's definitely not conlang and not a creole language, too. Officially it's a language in its own right but some people may argue that it's a dialect of Malay language. Hayabusa future 15:36, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
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- But isn't it a mixed language of sorts? Like mostly Malay with some Dutch and English and Japanese?Cameron Nedland 21:16, 25 August 2006 (UTC)
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- "Mixed languages" require more than simply words to be borrowed into its vocabulary. Otherwise English would be considered a mix of practically every language on earth. --Ptcamn 07:16, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
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- Okay, thanks.Cameron Nedland 13:13, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] Second Languange ?
The language is spoken fluently as a second language by most Indonesians, who generally use a regional language (examples are Minangkabau and Javanese) at home and in their local community.
I think the statement above is wrong. Bahasa Indonesia ( Indonesia languange ) is use majority by Indonesian. So Indonesian languange actually use as a first languange by most Indonesian. --_Annas_ 10:52, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
- Second language means the language one learns after their first language. For an Australia, or a Brit, their first language is going to be English. While you are correct in saying that it is used by a majority of Indonesians this does not necessarily mean that it is the first language (ie, first learnt) of a majority of Indonesians, nor does it mean that everyone uses it as their primary language - everyday they might use other local languages. THe article does say that a majority of Indonesians can and do speak Indonesian. I know it is common though for Jakartans to have learned Indonesian as their first (and only) local language with, maybe, English as their second. --Merbabu 13:27, 16 October 2006 (UTC)
I think the criteria of a primary language is not only the first language learnt, but also the language that subject is more proficient in. Although it is true that in very remote area local dialects are the first verbal communication methods taught, the more prevailing cases are where both languages (local dialects and Indonesian) are introduced simultaneously. I have never heard of any study done in this area regarding that "Indonesian is spoken as a second language by MOST Indonesian". It is a very strong statement and solid proof should be cited in that case, in my oppinion. --this unsigned edit from User -128.189.172.116
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Indonesian_language" -- This unsigned edit from User:Arsen
[edit] Glottal Stops and Tonic Syllables
Hi everyone. I have decided to ask these questions in the hopes that someone - maybe a native speaker or a someone with more expertise on the subject - can add these clarifications to the "Phonology" section of the article, because it has been sometime since I am looking for these answers, and I am sure more beginning students of these languages have been having the same doubts as me:
1. I think I read somewhere that in Indonesian and Malay there is an "automatic" glottal stop before each word-initial vowel (even if this vowel is preceeded by a word ending in a consonant), and between any vowels - with the exception of diphthongs, obviously. I did not gave this much thought though, until I realized that that was the way the words were being pronounced in the "Rosetta Stone - Indonesian" language learning software. So here is the question: In the "RS-I" software, are the words being pronounced like that just to make them more easily intelligible for beginners like myself, or are they really pronounced like that in everyday conversations? For instance, a simple sentence like
Apakah ada seorang pria di atas rumah itu?
Would be pronounced
[?a'pakah ?'ada se?'orang 'pria di ?'atas 'rumah ?'itu]
Or, in normal (or maybe fast-paced) conversation,
[a'pakah'adase'orang'priadi'atas'rumah'itu]?
(? = Glottal Stop; ' = Tonic Syllable)
2. In the same software ("Rosetta Stone - Indonesian"), the tonic syllables of some words seem to be the last one instead of the penultimate, even when the vowel in this syllable is not the schwa, and some words even seem to "change" their tonic syllable according to who is saying them. So here is the other question: Are the accentuation rules really just
"If the penultimate has a schwa, the last syllable is the tonic one; if the penultimate does not have a schwa, the penultimate is the tonic one;"
Or is this wrong?
Thank you very much, XVoX 06:02, 20 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] "Official Status" importance
Is this part of the article really necessary? It's already stated in the beginning that Bahasa Indonesia is the country's official language.