{"title":"A Typology of the Spread of Malay","authors":"A. Omar","doi":"10.47298/jala.v2-i4-a2","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A great deal has been said and researched on the role of Malay, as the lingua franca in commercial areas of insular Southeast Asia, and as the national language of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Brunei Darussalam. Its present-day status reflects its rise for centuries as a language of governance of Malay kingdoms in the Malay Peninsula, Sumatera, Borneo, and in the Moluccas. The presence of Malay in mainland Southeast Asia today extends its insular spread via the Malay Peninsula. These Malay kingdoms played as centres of dispersal of the use of Malay as the language was unrivalled in its sociolinguistic status in the whole of the Malay Archipelago, not just as the language of governance in those kingdoms, but also the language of diplomacy between them and those others within the archipelago itself, and even between those in the latter group. The widespread use of Malay in ancient times has been credited by historians to the hegemony of the Srivijaya Malay-speaking empire which lasted from the seventh to the 14th century C.E. Today the Malay language is known to have speakers of Malay outside of the archipelago, such as in Australia inclusive of the Christmas Islands and the Cocos (Keeling) Islands in the Indian Ocean (Asmah 2006, 2008), the Holy Land of Mecca and Medina (Asmah et al. 2015), England, the Netherlands, France, and Germany. Away from the Malay world, Malay speech communities have taken shape in these places; small they may be, but they are ‘alive,’ as a home language of immigrant Malay native speakers who have settled in these places, as products of Malay world migration.","PeriodicalId":36068,"journal":{"name":"Journal on Asian Linguistic Anthropology","volume":"41 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal on Asian Linguistic Anthropology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.47298/jala.v2-i4-a2","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
A great deal has been said and researched on the role of Malay, as the lingua franca in commercial areas of insular Southeast Asia, and as the national language of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Brunei Darussalam. Its present-day status reflects its rise for centuries as a language of governance of Malay kingdoms in the Malay Peninsula, Sumatera, Borneo, and in the Moluccas. The presence of Malay in mainland Southeast Asia today extends its insular spread via the Malay Peninsula. These Malay kingdoms played as centres of dispersal of the use of Malay as the language was unrivalled in its sociolinguistic status in the whole of the Malay Archipelago, not just as the language of governance in those kingdoms, but also the language of diplomacy between them and those others within the archipelago itself, and even between those in the latter group. The widespread use of Malay in ancient times has been credited by historians to the hegemony of the Srivijaya Malay-speaking empire which lasted from the seventh to the 14th century C.E. Today the Malay language is known to have speakers of Malay outside of the archipelago, such as in Australia inclusive of the Christmas Islands and the Cocos (Keeling) Islands in the Indian Ocean (Asmah 2006, 2008), the Holy Land of Mecca and Medina (Asmah et al. 2015), England, the Netherlands, France, and Germany. Away from the Malay world, Malay speech communities have taken shape in these places; small they may be, but they are ‘alive,’ as a home language of immigrant Malay native speakers who have settled in these places, as products of Malay world migration.
作为东南亚岛屿商业地区的通用语,以及马来西亚、印度尼西亚和文莱达鲁萨兰国的国语,关于马来语的作用已经有了大量的说法和研究。它现在的地位反映了几个世纪以来它作为马来半岛、苏门答腊、婆罗洲和摩鹿加群岛的马来王国的统治语言的崛起。今天,马来语在东南亚大陆的存在通过马来半岛扩展了它的岛屿传播。这些马来王国是马来语的传播中心,因为马来语在整个马来群岛的社会语言学地位是无与伦比的,不仅是这些王国的统治语言,而且是它们与群岛内其他国家之间的外交语言,甚至是后者之间的语言。马来语的广泛使用在古代已经被历史学家认为霸权的Srivijaya从第七讲国语帝国持续到公元14世纪的今天,马来语言是已知扬声器的马来群岛以外的,如在澳大利亚圣诞岛的包容性和可可(Keeling)在印度洋群岛(Asmah 2006、2008)的圣地麦加和麦地那(Asmah et al . 2015年),英国,荷兰,法国,和德国。远离马来世界,马来语社区已经在这些地方形成;它们可能很小,但作为在这些地方定居的以马来语为母语的移民的母语,作为马来世界移民的产物,它们是“活着的”。