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单词 indonesian
释义

Indonesian


In·do·ne·sian

I0113000 (ĭn′də-nē′zhən)n.1. a. A native or inhabitant of Indonesia.b. A person of Indonesian ancestry.2. A native or inhabitant of the Malay Archipelago.3. A subfamily of Austronesian that includes Malay, Tagalog, and the languages of Indonesia.4. A dialect of Malay that is the official language of Indonesia. Also called Bahasa Indonesia.adj. Of or relating to Indonesia, the Indonesians, or their languages or cultures.

Indonesian

(ˌɪndəʊˈniːzɪən) adj1. (Languages) of or relating to Indonesia, its people, or their language2. (Peoples) of or relating to Indonesia, its people, or their language3. (Languages) of or relating to Indonesia, its people, or their languagen4. (Peoples) a native or inhabitant of Indonesia5. (Placename) another name for Bahasa Indonesia

In•do•ne•sian

(ˌɪn dəˈni ʒən, -ʃən, -zi ən, -doʊ-)

n. 1. a native or inhabitant of Indonesia; a citizen of the Republic of Indonesia. 2. a form of Malay that serves as an official language and lingua franca in Indonesia. adj. 3. of or pertaining to Indonesia, its inhabitants, or the language Indonesian. [1840–50]
Thesaurus
Noun1.Indonesian - a native or inhabitant of IndonesiaIndonesian - a native or inhabitant of IndonesiaDutch East Indies, Indonesia, Republic of Indonesia - a republic in southeastern Asia on an archipelago including more than 13,000 islands; achieved independence from the Netherlands in 1945; the principal oil producer in the Far East and Pacific regionsAsian, Asiatic - a native or inhabitant of AsiaSumatran - a native or inhabitant of SumatraPapuan - a native or inhabitant of Papua New Guinea or New GuineaJavan, Javanese - a native or inhabitant of Java
2.Indonesian - the dialect of Malay used as the national language of the Republic of Indonesia or of MalaysiaIndonesian - the dialect of Malay used as the national language of the Republic of Indonesia or of MalaysiaBahasa, Bahasa IndonesiaMalay - a western subfamily of Western Malayo-Polynesian languagesJavanese - the Indonesian language spoken on JavaSundanese - the Indonesian language spoken in the Lesser Sunda IslandsBalinese - the Indonesian language of the people of Bali
Adj.1.Indonesian - of or relating to or characteristic of Indonesia or its people or languages
Translations
印度尼西亚人印度尼西亚的

Indonesian

印度尼西亚人zhCN, 印度尼西亚的zhCN

Indonesian


Indonesian

 

language of the Indonesians; official language of the Republic of Indonesia. It belongs to the Sumatran group of the Indonesian branch of the Austronesian (or Malayo-Polynesian) language family. After the formation of the Republic of Indonesia in 1945, the name of the language was firmly established as “Indonesian,” in place of the earlier term, “Malay.” Indonesian represents a further stage in the development of the Malay language and differs from it both in vocabulary and in morphology.

The oldest records of the Old Malay language (seventh century) were discovered on the island of Sumatra. From the third century until the 1930’s, Malay was preserved as the language of intertribal and interisland communication. Various alphabets have been used for Malay during the period of its existence: a version of Devanagari through the 13th century; an Arabic-based script, supplemented by a few additional letters, from the 14th to 19th centuries, and a Latin-based alphabet since the early 19th century.

During the process of its development, Malay (Indonesian) was enriched by a number of words from Chinese, Sanskrit, Arabic, Dutch, and other languages, including related languages of the Indonesian branch, such as Javanese, Sundanese, and Menangkabau. The phonemic inventory is made up of six vowels, four diphthongs, and 18 consonants, forming voiced-voiceless oppositions.

The parts of speech are weakly differentiated morphologically, and the same root morpheme can serve as a stem for the formation of words pertaining to several parts of speech without the addition of derivational morphemes. The noun system lacks the categories of number, case, and gender. Nouns can take only affixes of possession (pronominal enclitics): ajah, “father”; ajahku, “my father”; ajahmu, “thy father”; ajahnja, “his father.” Words denoting processes and states, as well as qualities perceived as states, are included among the parts of speech called predicatives. Process predicatives have the category of aspect— general aspect, intensive aspect (formed by gemination of the root morpheme), and perfective aspect (formed by means of the prefix ter-). Transitive predicatives are characterized by the presence of the prefix me—(phonetic variants men—, mem—, meng—, and menj—) in the active voice form and the morphemes ku— for the first person and kau— for the second person, and the prefix di— in the passive form. Relations among the parts of the sentence are expressed by prepositions.

REFERENCES

Teselkin, A. S., and N. F. Alieva. Indoneziiskii iazyk. Moscow, 1960.
Lordkipanidze, A. G., and A. P. Pavlenko. Russko-indoneziiskii uchebnyi slovar’. Moscow, 1963.
Bulygin, N. F., and L. G. Ushakova. Karmannyi indoneziisko-russkii slovar’. Moscow, 1959.
Grammatika indoneziiskogo iazyka. Moscow, 1972. (Contains a bibliography.)

V. D. ARAKTN

AcronymsSeeIND

Indonesian


  • noun

Synonyms for Indonesian

noun a native or inhabitant of Indonesia

Related Words

  • Dutch East Indies
  • Indonesia
  • Republic of Indonesia
  • Asian
  • Asiatic
  • Sumatran
  • Papuan
  • Javan
  • Javanese

noun the dialect of Malay used as the national language of the Republic of Indonesia or of Malaysia

Synonyms

  • Bahasa
  • Bahasa Indonesia

Related Words

  • Malay
  • Javanese
  • Sundanese
  • Balinese
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