Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Introduction
- Note for teachers of American English
- List of phonetic symbols
- Acknowledgements
- Dutch speakers
- Speakers of Scandinavian languages
- German speakers
- French speakers
- Italian speakers
- Speakers of Spanish and Catalan
- Portuguese speakers
- Greek speakers
- Russian speakers
- Polish speakers
- Farsi speakers
- Arabic speakers
- Turkish speakers
- Speakers of South Asian languages
- Speakers of Dravidian languages
- Speakers of West African languages
- Swahili speakers
- Malay/Indonesian speakers
- Japanese speakers
- Chinese speakers
- Korean speakers
- Thai speakers
- The cassette and CD
Malay/Indonesian speakers
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Introduction
- Note for teachers of American English
- List of phonetic symbols
- Acknowledgements
- Dutch speakers
- Speakers of Scandinavian languages
- German speakers
- French speakers
- Italian speakers
- Speakers of Spanish and Catalan
- Portuguese speakers
- Greek speakers
- Russian speakers
- Polish speakers
- Farsi speakers
- Arabic speakers
- Turkish speakers
- Speakers of South Asian languages
- Speakers of Dravidian languages
- Speakers of West African languages
- Swahili speakers
- Malay/Indonesian speakers
- Japanese speakers
- Chinese speakers
- Korean speakers
- Thai speakers
- The cassette and CD
Summary
Distribution
THE REPUBLIC OF INDONESIA, THE FEDERATION OF MALAYSIA, THE REPUBLIC OF SINGAPORE AND THE SULTANATE OF BRUNEI; southern and western coasts of Borneo, southernmost provinces of Thailand, Mergui Archipelago of Burma. Malay-based creoles are found not only among the originally Chinese speaking inhabitants of the old Straits Settlements of former British Malaya, but also in various ports of eastern Indonesia and on Christmas Island and the Cocos Islands in the Indian Ocean.
Introduction
The Malay or Malay/Indonesian (M/I) language belongs to the western Austronesian group of languages. A variety of Malay is an official language in four Southeast Asian countries: Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei, and some sort of standard formal Malay exists or is being developed by official bodies in these countries. Standard Malay in Malaysia and Indonesia serves as a means of communication for administration and political integration and as a mark of national identity in these two countries; it is used for academic, philosophical and professional communication as well as in literary writing. Most commonly, Malay/Indonesian is considered to constitute either a single language, or else two very closely related languages. Despite some marked differences between the two varieties in lexicon, pronunciation, grammatical choices and features of discourse organisation, the standard forms are mutually intelligible. As Malaysian and Indonesian students are schooled in Standard Malay in both countries, the linguistic problems they may encounter in learning and using the English language are quite similar.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Learner EnglishA Teacher's Guide to Interference and Other Problems, pp. 279 - 295Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001
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