Jump to content

Malay bhasa

Wikipedia se
Malay
Bahasa Melayu
بهاس ملايو
Naam ke bole ke dhang Template:IPA-ms
Jahan baat karaa jaae hae Brunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, South Thailand, Christmas Island, Cocos (Keeling) Islands
Ketnaa jan baat kare hae L1: 82 million
Bhasa ke palwaar Austronesian
Standard forms
Indonesian (as Bahasa Indonesia)
Writing system
Official status
Official language in
Recognised minority language in
Regulated by
Language codes
ISO 639-1 ms
ISO 639-2 may (B)  msa (T)
ISO 639-3 msaMacrolanguage
individual codes:
zlm  Malaysian Malay
ind  Indonesian
zsm  Malaysian Malay
abs  Ambon Malay
mbf  Baba Malay
pea  Baba Indonesian
mhp  Balinese Malay
bjn  Banjarese
mfb  Bangka Malay
btj  Bacan
bew  Betawi
bve  Berau
kxd  Brunei Malay
ccm  Chetty Malay
coa  Cocos Malay
liw  Col language
goq  Gorap
hji  Haji language
jax  Jambi Malay
vkk  Kaur
meo  Kedah Malay
mfa  Kelantan-Pattani Malay
kvr  Kerinci
mqg  Kota Bangun Kutai
mkn  Kupang Malay
mfp  Makassar Malay
xmm  Manado Malay
min  Minangkabau
mui  Musi
zmi  Negeri Sembilan
max  North Moluccan Malay
pmy  Papuan Malay
pel  Pekal
msi  Sabah Malay
sci  Sri Lanka Malay language
pse  South Barisan Malay
vkt  Tenggarong Kutai
Linguasphere 31-MFA-a

Malay bhasa ek Austronesian bhasa hae, itaukei me Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore kei Indonesia.

References

[badlo | source ke badlo]
  1. "Kedah MB defends use of Jawi on signboards", 26 August 2008.
  2. 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.
  3. 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
  4. "Recognition of Bahasa Indonesia as an official language of the General Conference of UNESCO". (in en)
  5. "East Timor Languages". www.easttimorgovernment.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2018.