Category
page 1Malay language
Malay
Austronesian macrolanguage, basis for Malaysian Malay and Indonesian
Jawi
Arabic alphabet adapted to write Malay, Indonesian, Javanese, Ida’an, Acehnese (or Achinese), Banjar, Minangkabau, Tausug (or Sulu), Musi, and several other languages of South East Asia
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wilaya
A wilaya or wilayah (, plural ; ; ; ) is an administrative division, usually translated as "state", "province" or occasionally as "governorate". The word comes from the Arabic root "w-l-y", "to govern": a wāli—"governor"—governs a wilāya, "that which is governed". Under the Caliphate, the term referred to any constituent near-sovereign state.
Malaysian Malay
standard Malay dialect spoken in Malaysia
Jambi Malay
language in Indonesia
Bengkulu
language of Indonesia
Malay alphabet
ISO basic Roman alphabet without any diacritics, used to write Malay language
Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka
Regulator for Malay language and publisher
comparison of Standard Malay and Indonesian
linguistic comparison
Manually Coded Malay
manually-coded language
Terengganu Malay
language
history of the Malay language
aspect of history
Judeo-Malay
Judeo-Malay (, Jawi: , Hebrew: מלאית-יהודית) is a variant of the Malay language once spoken or written by the Jews of Penang, a state located in northern Peninsular Malaysia. Judeo-Malay is the only known recorded Jewish language of the Austronesian family. The surviving manuscripts of Judeo-Malay are recorded on a notepad of an Iranian Jew by the name of Rahamim Jacob Cohen, which is currently kept in the Microfilms of Alalay Manuscripts from the British Library Asia, Pacific and Africa Collections.
Malay phonology
sounds and pronunciation of Malay and Indonesian
Perak Malay
Malaysian Malay dialect
Sitopayan I inscription