Results 11 to 20 of about 10,478 (224)

Alternasi Bunyi Bahasa Indonesia dalam Kognat Melayu Ulu Kapuas

open access: yesAksara, 2023
Indonesian is derived from Standard Malay; while Ulu Kapuas is a dialect of Malay. Sameness between the two language codes is shown by their identical cognates. There are other cognates showing sound alternations.
Fauzi Syamsuar
doaj   +1 more source

INTRODUCING CULTURE THROUGH ENGLISH LOANWORDS FROM BAHASA INDONESIA

open access: yesLire Journal, 2023
Contact among languages enables speakers to borrow particular words from one language to another language. This kind of loanword occasionally brings the cultural values of the borrowed language.
Lina Septianasari
doaj   +1 more source

Social dimensions of the nasal prefix in Jakarta Indonesian

open access: yesNusa, 2022
Standard Indonesian has a widely used active verbal prefix /məN-/ marking the active voice which alternates in its shape at the prefix-root boundary. Most previous studies were devoted to Standard Indonesian as spoken in formal contexts.
Ferdinan Okki Kurniawan
doaj   +1 more source

Vowel adaptations of Indonesian loanwords into dialects of Acehnese: Reinforcing Acehnese identity

open access: yesStudies in English Language and Education, 2023
Acehnese, like other regional languages throughout Indonesia, is in constant and intense contact with Bahasa Indonesia, a lingua franca of Indonesia. Not surprisingly, many Indonesian loanwords are flooding into Acehnese. There are some interesting sound
Zulfadli A. Aziz   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Annual Research Review: How did COVID-19 affect young children's language environment and language development? A scoping review. [PDF]

open access: yesJ Child Psychol Psychiatry
A diverse body of research conducted since the start of Covid‐19 has investigated the impact of the pandemic on children's environments and their language development. This scoping review synthesises the peer‐reviewed research literature on this topic between 2020 and 2023.
Zuniga-Montanez C   +4 more
europepmc   +2 more sources

Social Discrimination: A Case Study of Social Subordination to Eastern Vernacular Indonesian Speakers

open access: yesPrasasti: Journal of Linguistics, 2023
This research aims to explain the correlation between Bahasa Indonesia’s vernacular variation and the social discrimination experienced by Eastern Indonesian. The researchers apply qualitative-quantitative method.
Ayudhia Ratna Wijaya, Cesar Abdul Rizal
doaj   +1 more source

Slang dalam Bahasa Indonesia: Kajian Morfosemantik

open access: yesDiglosia, 2022
Slang is one of language varieties used by a speaker in an informal communication event for specific purposes. It is used for the purpose of effective communication among a group of speakers; however it can also trigger a communication failure.
M. Bahri Arifin   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Phonological and Morphological Factors of Indonesian Children's Stuttering

open access: yesHumanus, 2023
The aim of this research is to examine whether there is an influence of children who stutter (CWS) on linguistic factors (phonology and morphology) in Indonesian. This research is a case study research with quantitative methods. The method used was: five CWS were directed to spontaneously speak Indonesian with a stuttering examination validated by a ...
Reny Rahmalina   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

ENGLISH PRONUNCIATION DIVERSITY PRODUCED BY INDONESIAN COVER-SINGERS: A CASE STUDY ON THE YOUTUBE CHANNEL

open access: yesLET: Linguistics, Literature and English Teaching Journal, 2021
This study focuses on the pronunciation changes of the Indonesian cover-singers on YouTube. It is qualitative research by using documentation technique. There were three subjects of this study namely RM with song “Memories”, AH with song “Thank You Next”,
Ismi Maulina Utami
doaj   +1 more source

Errors in the Writing of Indonesian Sounds by Arabic Native Speakers Students at the University of Al Azhar, Cairo

open access: yesCMES (Center of Middle Eastern Studies), 2022
Learning Bahasa Indonesia (bI) for al-Azhar students is new knowledge. Indonesian language is considered a second language(L2) or third (L3) language after Arabic (Ar). Each of the languages being studied has its own system of rules.
Moh Masrukhi
doaj   +1 more source

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