Jaku Melayu (Jaku Melayu: Bahasa Melayu, Jawi: بهاس ملايو) nya siti ari jaku raban Austronesia ti dikena enggau resmi ba Brunei, Malaysia enggau Singapura enggau dipejaku enggau sekeda endur ba Thailand. Jaku tu bisi pemayuh 30 juta orang ti landik bejaku. Enti dipegulai enggau Jaku Indonesia, jaku tu ngembuan 290 juta orang pejaku ba serata Asia Tenggara Maritim.[7][8]
Jaku tu plurosentrik enggau siti jaku makro, iya nya, beberapa bansa iya distandard nyadi jaku nasional (bahasa kebangsaan tauka bahasa nasional) sekeda menua enggau bemacham nama resmi: ba Malaysia, jaku tu kala dikumbai Bahasa Malaysia ("Jaku Malaysia") sereta leka jaku Bahasa Melayu ("jaku Melayu") dikena diatu ba Malaysia lalu pia mega Brunei enggau Singapura; ba Indonesia, siti bansa normatif autonomi ti dikumbai Bahasa Indonesia ("jaku Indonesia") dikena nyadi bahasa persatuan/pemersatu ("jaku penyerakup" tauka lingua franca) lalu leka jaku "Melayu" (bahasa Melayu) disekat dalam menua ngagai bansa vernakular asal Melayu ngagai kandang menua Tengah ngagai Selatan Sumatera enggau Kalimantan Barat.[9][lower-alpha 1]
Jaku Melayu Klasik nyadi standard litericha Kesultanan Melaka enggau Johor sebedau kolonial lalu nya alai jaku nya kekadang dikumbai Melaka, Johor tauka Melayu Riau (tauka mayuh macham kombinasyen nama nya) dikena mida iya ari mayuh macham jaku Melayu bukai. jaku. Nitihka Ethnologue 16, beberapa bansa jaku Melayu ti dirintaika sida diatu nyadi jaku kediri nyengkaum bansa jaku Orang Asli ari jaku Melayu Semenanjung, balat bendar bekaul enggau jaku Melayu Standard nyentukka sida tau nyadika bukti dialek. Bisi mega beberapa jaku dagang enggau jaku kreol Melayu (e.g. jaku Melayu Ambon) bepelasarka lingua franca ti datai ari jaku Melayu Klasik sereta mega jaku Melayu Makassar, ti dipeda baka jaku ti bechampur.
Penerang
- ↑ Uli, Kozok (10 March 2012). "How many people speak Indonesian". University of Hawaii at Manoa. Diambi 20 October 2012.
James T. Collins (Bahasa Sanskerta dan Bahasa Melayu, Jakarta: KPG 2009) gives a conservative estimate of approximately 200 million, and a maximum estimate of 250 million speakers of Malay (Collins 2009, p. 17).
- ↑ "Kedah MB defends use of Jawi on signboards". The Star. 26 August 2008. Diarkib ari asal on 29 October 2012.
- ↑ Dahlan, H. Abdullah Zaini. Kitabati, Practical Methods for Learning to Read & Write Pegon (Kitabati, Metode Praktis Belajar Membaca & Menulis Pegon). Zaini Press. Accessed April 19, 2023. https://ia903106.us.archive.org/22/items/etaoin/Kitabati.pdf.
- ↑ The abstract of this journal article is written in Indonesian language (Bahasa Indonesia), in Latin and in Pegon: Estuningtiyas, R. (2021). Rijal Dakwah: KH. Abdullah Syafi’ie (1910-1985). The International Journal of Pegon : Islam Nusantara Civilization, 5(01), 81-96. https://doi.org/10.51925/inc.v5i01.45
- ↑ "Recognition of Bahasa Indonesia as an official language of the General Conference of UNESCO". unesco.org / document no. 42 C/28. Diambi 2023-11-20.
- ↑ "East Timor Languages". www.easttimorgovernment.com. Diarkib ari asal on 4 March 2016. Diambi 30 July 2018.
- ↑ 10 million in Malaysia as either "Malay" or "Malaysian", 5 million in Indonesia as "Malay" plus 260 million as "Indonesian", etc.
- ↑ Wardhana, Dian Eka Chandra (2021). "Indonesian as the Language of ASEAN During the New Life Behavior Change 2021". Journal of Social Work and Science Education. 1 (3): 266–280. doi:10.52690/jswse.v1i3.114. Diambi 29 January 2021.
- ↑ Asmah Haji Omar (1992). "Malay as a pluricentric language". In Clyne, Michael J. (ed.). Malay as a pluricentric language Pluricentric Languages: Differing Norms in Different Nations. Berlin & New York: Mouton de Gruyte. pp. 403–4. ISBN 3-11-012855-1.
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
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- ↑ Tadmor, Uri (2009). "Malay-Indonesian". In Bernard Comrie (ed.). The World's Major Languages (2nd ed.). London: Routledge. pp. 791–818.
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