Learn to Speak Malay Language (Bahasa Malaysia) in 10 Hours by David Yao
Salepage : Learn to Speak Malay Language (Bahasa Malaysia) in 10 Hours by David Yao
Archive : Learn to Speak Malay Language (Bahasa Malaysia) in 10 Hours by David Yao Digital Download
Delivery : Digital Download Immediately
What you’ll discover
Malay Language in Perspective
Speak the Fundamental Conversational Sentence
Grammar of the Malay Language
ten topics covered
Three hundred sentences
500 Vocabulary Terms
As a foreigner who has lived in Malaysia for many years, I understand what foreigners require and what obstacles they must overcome when learning Bahasa Malaysia. Grandfather’s company published the first book I used to learn Bahasa in 1982, titled “Buku Panduan Praktis Bahasa Malaysia” or “Practical Handbook of Bahasa Malaysia.” In June 2017, I finally met the author, Mr. Lai Choy. He wrote the book “Malay Chinese English.” We met and discussed a variety of topics, and I’m hoping to use my platform for a new course with him. After my Grandfather died around 9 years ago, I realized I was on the path to publishing, but in the digital era.
The Malay language, also known as bahasa Melayu in the Malay Peninsula, is an Austronesian language spoken by the Malay people of the Malay Peninsula, southern Thailand, the Philippines, Singapore, central eastern Sumatra, the Riau islands, and parts of Borneo’s coast. Malaysia, Brunei, and Singapore all have it as an official language. It is very similar to Indonesian, also known locally as Bahasa Indonesia, the official language of Indonesia and Papua New Guinea’s native language. This language is spoken by approximately 350 – 400 million people, according to my estimates.
The language is known as Bahasa Melayu or Bahasa Malaysia in Malaysia, which means Malay or Malaysian. The latter term, introduced by the National Language Act of 1967, was dominant until the 1990s, when most academics and government officials reverted to the older term, which is used in the Malay version of the Federal Constitution. Indonesia adopted a form of Malay as its official language upon independence, naming it Bahasa Indonesia and although a degree of mutual intelligibility exists, Indonesian is considerably distinct from Malay as spoken in Malaysia. In Singapore and Brunei it is known simply as Malay or Bahasa Melayu.
File size: 1.6GB
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