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Indonesian language
Arxiv:2011.02128V1 [Cs.CL] 4 Nov 2020
Youth, Technology and Indigenous Language Revitalization in Indonesia
A Sociolinguistics Study on the Use of the Javanese Language in the Learning Process in Primary Schools in Surakarta, Central Java, Indonesia
References
REVIEWING LEXICOLOGY of the NUSANTARA LANGUAGE Mohd Yusop Sharifudin Universiti Putra Malaysia Email
Journal of Language, Culture, and Religion
Language and Culture: Kinship System of Batak Toba-Samosir Ethnic
English Code Switching in Indonesian Language
1 Linguistic Analysis on Javanese Language
Primary School Students' Barriers on Learning Javanese Language
Journal of Arts & Humanities
Distribution of Daily Use Local Language in Indonesia
High Registers of Tetun Dili: Portuguese Press and Purist Priests
A Grammar of Toba Batak Koninklijk Instituut Voor Taal-, Land- En Volkenkunde
Language Documentation of Colloquial Javanese Varieties *
Fisher Hawii 0085A 10300.Pdf
GOO-80-02119 392P
Javanese Kramacode Mixing in the Indonesian Language Use of Non- Formal Situation in the Javanese Community Environment
Top View
L1 Grammatical Inferences on English of Students in Four Senior High Schools in Mataram
East Timor Phrasebook 3
Resources Report on Languages of Indonesia
1 Toba Batak Language Morphological System
H. Steinhauer the Indonesian Language Situation and Linguistics; Prospects and Possibilities
Lampungic Languages: Looking for New Evidence of Language Shift in Lampung and the Question of Its Reversal*
The Amarasi of Indonesia Amarasi Farmers Cultivate Indonesia’S Timor Island, Where Most People Live in the Mountainous Interior
In Toba Batak
INDO 93 0 1337870193 1 32.Pdf (802.5Kb)
The Indonesian Language and Its Potential to Become an International Language
1 Attitudes Toward Tetun Dili, a Language of East Timor a Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Division of the Universityof H
The Descriptive Study on Question Words in Amanatun Dialect of Meto Language
The Ethnolinguistic Situation in East Timor -- Current Work at The
Book Reviews
Differences on Language Structure Between English and Indonesian
Looking for New Evidence of the Possibility of Language Shift in Lampung and the Question of Its Reversal *
Regional Languages in Indonesian Educational System
Indonesian Is the National Language of a Vast, Plural Nation-State, the World's Fourth-Largest Country with a Population of More Than 200 Million People
Prominence in Indonesian Stress, Phrases, and Boundaries
Linguistic Papers in Memory of David John Prentice
Non-Subject Arguments in Indonesian in the Theoretical Framework of Lexical-Functional Grammar
Local Languages in Indonesia: Language Maintenance Or Language Shift?
Language Policy: Reinforcing the Identity of Using Community in Banyuwangi
The Indonesian Language in Learning English Menolong Guru (Helping Teachers)
The Translation of Makhioui Text from Batak Simalungun Wedding Ceremony in North Sumatra (Indonesia)
Visualizing Language Lexical Similarity Clusters: a Case Study of Indonesian Ethnic Languages
Maintenance of Lampung Language in Padang Cermin District
Code Switching of Sasaknese Children at Selong in Their Daily Conversation
The Ethnolinguistic Vitality of Konjo in Bulukumba Regency of South Sulawesi, Indonesia
*‡Table 6. Languages
The Javanese Language at Risk? Perspectives from an East Java Village
Maintenance of Lampung Language in Padang Cermin District
Seloka: Jurnal Pendidikan Bahasa Dan Sastra Indonesia Dawan
The Inflection of Sasak Language in Kuripan Village: a Morphological Study
Understanding the Christian C
Uli Kozok. Indonesian Native-Speakers: Myth and Reality
The Linguistic Features of Malay Papuan In
Language Contact and Functional Expansion in Tetun Dili: the Evolution of a New Press Register
Language and Basic Education in Indonesia
Loss and Gain in Translation of Culture-Specific Items in Ahmad Tohari’S Lintang Kemukus: a Semantic Study
Object Shift and Agent Extraction in Mandar*
Proposal Penelitian
The Language and Dialect Variations of Angkola, Batak Toba, and Mandailing
An Analysis of Indonesia's National Language Policy Scott Paauw
Developing a Role for Kupang Malay
Indonesian/Malay
Indigenous Spirits and Global Aspirations in a Southeast Asian Borderland
Split S in the Indonesian Area
Pidgin Or Creole Journal on English As a Foreign Language