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Correlation between religiosity, family functioning, and factors associated with substance use among secondary school students in high-risk areas. [PDF]
Ab Aziz NA +5 more
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Large-Area Electrodeposited WSe<sub>2</sub> over Graphene Electrodes for Optoelectronics. [PDF]
Zhang J +16 more
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Job specific health status of workers in ayurvedic pharmaceutical manufacturing units across Kerala: a cross-sectional study. [PDF]
U PV +5 more
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Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 2019
Malacca Portuguese Creole (MPC) (ISO 639-3; code: mcm), popularly known as Malacca Portuguese or locally as (Papiá) Cristang, belongs to the group of Portuguese-lexified creoles of (South)east Asia, which includes the extinct varieties of Batavia/Tugu (Maurer 2013) and Bidau, East Timor (Baxter 1990), and the moribund variety of Macau (Baxter 2009 ...
Stefanie Pillai +2 more
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Malacca Portuguese Creole (MPC) (ISO 639-3; code: mcm), popularly known as Malacca Portuguese or locally as (Papiá) Cristang, belongs to the group of Portuguese-lexified creoles of (South)east Asia, which includes the extinct varieties of Batavia/Tugu (Maurer 2013) and Bidau, East Timor (Baxter 1990), and the moribund variety of Macau (Baxter 2009 ...
Stefanie Pillai +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Marine Pollution Bulletin, 2000
Abstract The Malacca Straits have long been an important trade route linking the Indian Ocean to the South China Sea and Pacific Ocean. From the seventh to the eleventh century, the Srivijaya empire controlled them, followed in the fifteenth century by the port kingdom of Malacca.
Chua Thia-Eng +5 more
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Abstract The Malacca Straits have long been an important trade route linking the Indian Ocean to the South China Sea and Pacific Ocean. From the seventh to the eleventh century, the Srivijaya empire controlled them, followed in the fifteenth century by the port kingdom of Malacca.
Chua Thia-Eng +5 more
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Journal of Southeast Asian History, 1960
The importance of the Portuguese sources for our knowledge of Malayan history has long been recognized. Fortunately, most of them are now available in translation, and thus accessible to historians who have difficulty in reading 16th or 17th century Portuguese.In the first place we should mention the English translations issued by the Hakluyt Society ...
P. E. De Josselin De Jong +1 more
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The importance of the Portuguese sources for our knowledge of Malayan history has long been recognized. Fortunately, most of them are now available in translation, and thus accessible to historians who have difficulty in reading 16th or 17th century Portuguese.In the first place we should mention the English translations issued by the Hakluyt Society ...
P. E. De Josselin De Jong +1 more
openaire +1 more source
Journal of Southeast Asian History, 1962
There was a stone fort at Malacca from 1512 to 1807. Only twice during the three centuries of its existence did this fort change hands, and it was taken by storm only once. Yet it was many times besieged, and nations which did not possess it regarded it with disfavour as a threat to the security of their communications and a hindrance, if not a barrier,
openaire +1 more source
There was a stone fort at Malacca from 1512 to 1807. Only twice during the three centuries of its existence did this fort change hands, and it was taken by storm only once. Yet it was many times besieged, and nations which did not possess it regarded it with disfavour as a threat to the security of their communications and a hindrance, if not a barrier,
openaire +1 more source

