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Author Message
25 new of 111 responses total.
yenny1
response 33 of 111: Mark Unseen   Nov 29 00:52 UTC 1996

Hi everyone!
Just wanted to say hello and 'Selamat Datang' ( Welcome)
srw
response 34 of 111: Mark Unseen   Nov 30 05:31 UTC 1996

Welcome Yenny. Is that an Indonesian Language?
rcurl
response 35 of 111: Mark Unseen   Jan 4 20:03 UTC 1997

There is a discussion in Item 27 of coop about a proposal to make Grex
conferences open to reading on the WEB without requiring readers to open
Grex accounts (called "anonymoous web reading of conferences"). An
argument in favor of doing this is that it could attract new participants
in conferencing after readers get a taste of what it is like. If you have
an opinion on this with regard to this conference, let us know: if you
have a opinion with regard to any other conference, you might start a
discussion of it there. In any case, you can read all sides of the issue
in coop item 27.
yenny1
response 36 of 111: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 01:16 UTC 1997

#34, well... actually it a Malay Language
spoken by the Malay people in Malaysia
Steve, do u know  Indonesian Language?

yenny1
response 37 of 111: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 01:25 UTC 1997

#36, I forgot to mention that Malay & In doneisan , they are more
or less the same ( like the greetings etc) but they can be quite different
sometimes. Even I have difficulty understanding the Indonesian Language

srw
response 38 of 111: Mark Unseen   Jan 17 19:53 UTC 1997

No. I am not familiar with languages from that part of the world at all.
I am curious about all languages, though.
raoa
response 39 of 111: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 13:56 UTC 1997

tell me more about Malaya language.
srw
response 40 of 111: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 07:37 UTC 1997

Yenny?
raoa
response 41 of 111: Mark Unseen   Feb 4 11:57 UTC 1997

What is "Yenny?".
srw
response 42 of 111: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 02:14 UTC 1997

Not what, "who". Yenny is the person who first used Malay in this item in
resp:33.
cecille
response 43 of 111: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 10:07 UTC 1997

Hola! He escribido que deseo estudiar Espan~ol porque no hablo la lengua
muy bien. Bueno, estoy estudiando en Instituto Cervantes. Es muy 
interesante! Mi professor es muy simpatica. 
kami
response 44 of 111: Mark Unseen   Mar 7 21:01 UTC 1997

Muy bien!  Por favor escriba un poco en el "item" espan~ol, para envivir lo.
yenny1
response 45 of 111: Mark Unseen   Apr 10 06:32 UTC 1997

Sorry for not visiting this conf for a long time.
OK, raoa, "Bahasa Malaysia/Melayu" - Malay Language is the language
spoken by us Malaysian . "Selamat Datang " is our way of saying welcome.
Other examples:
Terima Kasih - Thank you
Sama-sama - You're welcome
I'll try to give other examples from time to time.
email me if u want to know some more.
rcurl
response 46 of 111: Mark Unseen   Apr 10 08:13 UTC 1997

You might want to start a Malay item - just for those writing Malay or
those interested in language. What are the roots of Malay?
yenny1
response 47 of 111: Mark Unseen   Apr 11 01:23 UTC 1997

I thought  of doing that, but i wonder how many people in grex know or 
ever heard of the language. Maybe we can start it somehow.
You can usually find Malay people in South East Asia- mainly in Malaysia and
few nieghbouring countries like Indonesia and Brunei althought they are
not called Malaysian. Theses three group basically have some similarity
in they language. Probably that's why Steve thought that when I first used
the phrase "Selamat Datang" as an Indonesian language.
rcurl
response 48 of 111: Mark Unseen   Apr 11 06:07 UTC 1997

Are these "polynesian" languages?
yenny1
response 49 of 111: Mark Unseen   Apr 14 03:05 UTC 1997

Not too sure about that. Guess I have to check that fact out somehow bfeore
I can say anything.
atticus
response 50 of 111: Mark Unseen   May 22 13:03 UTC 1997

i don't thik malay is a polynesian language. polynesians
came from south america, (remember kon-tiki and thor heyerdahl?)
is malay related to chinese in anyway? its script for example?
gracel
response 51 of 111: Mark Unseen   May 23 16:00 UTC 1997

Heyerdahl's thesis was that Polynesians came from South America but didn't
stay there, so that alone is not a cogent argument.  (And for some,
"Polynesia" sometimes seems to be a vague term used to mean "all those 
little islands in the Pacific")

I'm not a linguistic expert myself, but the dictionary says that
Malay is a member of the Austronesian language family, a family also called
Malayo-Polynesian.  (Austronesia = Indonesia + Melanesia + Micronesia +
Polynesia)
yenny1
response 52 of 111: Mark Unseen   May 29 06:04 UTC 1997

re #50:
is malay related to chinese in anyway? its script for example?

Not that I know of. But I remember when I was in school studying history 
, the was a mention about ppl from IndoChina(?) coming to Peninsular 
Malaysia and that somehow had an impact on the origin of Malay ppl. Then 
again I could be wrong. That was a long time ago.

As far as I can tell, you can find Malay speaking ppl ( or language 
quite similar to that ) in Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei,Christmas Island 
( I read an article about this few months ago) and somewhere in the 
southern part of Africa!. Even I was surprise when I heard this.

Certain words in Malay language comes from the Arabic and Sanskrit. And 
nowadays many words in English have been adopted as Malay language. This 
is very true in IT world where it is simply impossible to find the 
meaning in Malay. e.g Information - Informasi ( notice the different 
spelling ).

Hope this will help to understand a little bit about Malay language.

atticus
response 53 of 111: Mark Unseen   May 29 14:10 UTC 1997

isn't "amok" (as in "running amok") a malayan word adapted in english?
yenny1
response 54 of 111: Mark Unseen   May 30 01:55 UTC 1997

yes, that's true.
atticus
response 55 of 111: Mark Unseen   May 30 06:41 UTC 1997

how do you say "goodbye"/"see you again" in malay?
yenny1
response 56 of 111: Mark Unseen   May 30 08:16 UTC 1997

Goodbye - Selamat Tinggal
See you Again - Jumpa lagi
kami
response 57 of 111: Mark Unseen   May 30 18:00 UTC 1997

do you happen to know the *literal* meaning of "goodbye" in Malay?--In English,
it's derived from "god be with you".  Selamat looks *close* to salaam--peace.
Yes?
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