An acoustics study of the monophthongs of Kedah Malay / Afiqah Jazmin Azli

The Malay language has a long history and is spoken by many speakers as it has been lingua franca for the speakers in Malaysia, southern Philippines, Indonesia, Singapore as well as Brunei (Asmah, 1982). There are linguistic, extra linguistic and sociolinguistic factors that enabled Malay to beco...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Afiqah Jazmin, Azli
Format: Thesis
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7735/
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7735/1/All.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7735/5/afiqah.pdf
_version_ 1848773471426838528
author Afiqah Jazmin, Azli
author_facet Afiqah Jazmin, Azli
author_sort Afiqah Jazmin, Azli
building UM Research Repository
collection Online Access
description The Malay language has a long history and is spoken by many speakers as it has been lingua franca for the speakers in Malaysia, southern Philippines, Indonesia, Singapore as well as Brunei (Asmah, 1982). There are linguistic, extra linguistic and sociolinguistic factors that enabled Malay to become the lingua franca of this region. One of it was due to its simplicity in terms of phonological system (Asmah, 1982). For instance, the vowels in Malay are primary cardinals with the exception for few Malay varieties, such as Kelantan Malay, and the consonants are easier to articulate for nonnative speakers “compared to the Javanese heavy ones” (Asmah, 1982, 4). In addition, the grammatical system of the Malay language also helps to speed up the process of acquiring the language as there are no categories for case, tense, number and gender unlike other languages (Asmah, 1982). Therefore, it is not surprising that the Malay language spread rapidly in this region and become a lingua-franca “as early as the seventh century AD” (Asmah, 1982, 2). This took place when foreign travellers visited the Malay peninsula recorded that the common language used for communication during that time was Malay language. In Malaysia particularly, the spread of the Malay language emerged after gaining independence from Great Britain. The same goes to Indonesia (Asmah, 1982). Upon independence, the use of the language in official functions, educational institutions and government administration increased.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T13:42:56Z
format Thesis
id um-7735
institution University Malaya
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T13:42:56Z
publishDate 2017
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling um-77352020-01-18T02:14:42Z An acoustics study of the monophthongs of Kedah Malay / Afiqah Jazmin Azli Afiqah Jazmin, Azli P Philology. Linguistics The Malay language has a long history and is spoken by many speakers as it has been lingua franca for the speakers in Malaysia, southern Philippines, Indonesia, Singapore as well as Brunei (Asmah, 1982). There are linguistic, extra linguistic and sociolinguistic factors that enabled Malay to become the lingua franca of this region. One of it was due to its simplicity in terms of phonological system (Asmah, 1982). For instance, the vowels in Malay are primary cardinals with the exception for few Malay varieties, such as Kelantan Malay, and the consonants are easier to articulate for nonnative speakers “compared to the Javanese heavy ones” (Asmah, 1982, 4). In addition, the grammatical system of the Malay language also helps to speed up the process of acquiring the language as there are no categories for case, tense, number and gender unlike other languages (Asmah, 1982). Therefore, it is not surprising that the Malay language spread rapidly in this region and become a lingua-franca “as early as the seventh century AD” (Asmah, 1982, 2). This took place when foreign travellers visited the Malay peninsula recorded that the common language used for communication during that time was Malay language. In Malaysia particularly, the spread of the Malay language emerged after gaining independence from Great Britain. The same goes to Indonesia (Asmah, 1982). Upon independence, the use of the language in official functions, educational institutions and government administration increased. 2017-06 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7735/1/All.pdf application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7735/5/afiqah.pdf Afiqah Jazmin, Azli (2017) An acoustics study of the monophthongs of Kedah Malay / Afiqah Jazmin Azli. Masters thesis, University of Malaya. http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7735/
spellingShingle P Philology. Linguistics
Afiqah Jazmin, Azli
An acoustics study of the monophthongs of Kedah Malay / Afiqah Jazmin Azli
title An acoustics study of the monophthongs of Kedah Malay / Afiqah Jazmin Azli
title_full An acoustics study of the monophthongs of Kedah Malay / Afiqah Jazmin Azli
title_fullStr An acoustics study of the monophthongs of Kedah Malay / Afiqah Jazmin Azli
title_full_unstemmed An acoustics study of the monophthongs of Kedah Malay / Afiqah Jazmin Azli
title_short An acoustics study of the monophthongs of Kedah Malay / Afiqah Jazmin Azli
title_sort acoustics study of the monophthongs of kedah malay / afiqah jazmin azli
topic P Philology. Linguistics
url http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7735/
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7735/1/All.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/7735/5/afiqah.pdf