Indonesian
From WikiLang
Indonesian pages
|
|---|
| Introduction · Adjectives · Numbers · Pronouns · Sounds and Writing · Verbs |
| Austronesian Languages | |
|---|---|
| Bornean | Malagasy
|
| Central Pacific | Fijian · Rotuman
|
| Independent CE Malayo-Polynesian | Chamorro · Palauan
|
| Malayo-Sumbawan | Balinese · Indonesian · Javanese · Madurese · Malay · Sundanese
|
| Micronesian | Gilbertese · Marshallese · Nauruan
|
| Polynesian | Hawaiian · Māori · Niuean · Rapa Nui · Samoan · Tahitian · Tokelauan · Tongan · Tuvaluan
|
| Philippine | Cebuano · Ilokano · Tagalog
|
| Timor-Babar | Tetum
|
An Introduction to the Language
Indonesian is a standardized dialect of Malay Language that was officially defined with the declaration of Indonesia's independence in 1945 although in the 1928 Indonesian Youth Pledge have declared it as the official language.
Family
Austronesian
- Malayo-Polynesian
- Nuclear Malayo-Polynesian
- Sunda-Sulawesi
- Malayic
- Malayan
- Malay
- Indonesian
- Malay
- Malayan
- Malayic
- Sunda-Sulawesi
- Nuclear Malayo-Polynesian
Spoken in
Indonesian is an official language only in Indonesia. There are about 200 million of speakers in the world (only 17 million native speakers).
Indonesian pages
Malagasy
Fijian ·
Rotuman
Palauan
Balinese ·
Javanese ·
Madurese ·
Sundanese
Gilbertese ·
Nauruan
Hawaiian ·
Niuean ·
Samoan ·
Tahitian ·
Tokelauan ·
Tongan ·
Tuvaluan
Ilokano ·
Tetum
