Musi language
Musi, also known as Palembang Malay, Basa Pelembang Sari-sari and Sekayu, is a Malayan language spoken by about 3 million residents of Palembang metropolitan area (the capital of South Sumatra, Indonesia) and the surrounding area. In recent times, the Palembang Malay language has become a lingua franca in South Sumatra province, although South Sumatra also has other regional languages and dialects. Palembang is highly influenced by Javanese, because the first speakers came from Demak, Central Java in the 18th century.
Comparison with Standard Malay
Palembang |
Standard Malay / Indonesian |
English |
apo |
apa |
what |
dio |
dia |
she |
mato |
mata |
eye |
kecik |
kecil |
small |
besak |
besar |
big |
ambik |
ambil |
take |
telok |
telur |
egg |
ikok |
ekor |
tail |
anget |
hangat |
warm |
lengen |
lengan |
arm |
ngenjuk |
hunjuk / unjuk |
give |
idak |
tidak |
no |
ari |
hari |
day |
jiron |
jiran |
neighbor |
Words similar with Javanese
Palembang |
Javanese |
Standard Malay / Indonesian |
English |
wong |
wong |
orang |
people |
melok |
melu |
ikut |
follow |
dewe |
dhewe |
sendiri |
alone |
lawang |
lawang |
pintu |
door |
lanang |
lanang |
lelaki |
male |
selawe |
selawe |
dua puluh lima |
twenty five |
jero |
jero |
dalam |
inside |
iwak |
iwak |
ikan |
fish |
banyu |
banyu |
air |
water |
dulur |
dulur |
saudara |
siblings, relatives |
metu |
metu |
keluar |
go out |
abang |
abang |
merah |
red |
Original words (unknown source)
Palembang |
Standard Malay / Indonesian |
English |
pacak |
bisa, boleh |
can |
pecak, cak |
macam, seperti |
looks like |
galak |
mahu, mau |
want to |
parak |
dekat |
near, close |
katek |
tidak ada |
none, nothing |
kagek |
nanti |
later |
kanji |
genit |
vain |
tujah |
tikam |
stab someone |
singit |
sembunyi |
hide |
alep |
cantik |
beautiful |
baseng |
terserah |
up to you |
goco |
pukul |
hit |
terajang |
hantam |
hit hardly |
campak |
jatuh |
fall |
lokak |
peluang |
opportunity |
berejo |
berusaha |
to make effort |
References
- ↑ Musi at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Musi (Malay)". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.