Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Learn a little Indonesian and Malay

Flag of Singapore, a country where you hear four languages in announcements on the MRT (train system). 

Here are a few words of Malay for today, and Indonesian is almost the same, with the occasional addition of a local word, like American English and British English. I have added in brackets my ways of remembering the word.

You hear and see the Malay language in Singapore, where I live part of the year. Malay is one of four official languages. Announcements are made in Malay, often ending with terimah kasih, meaning thank you. One day I shall record the announcements and type the English with the translations into the other three languages. Then I can effortlessly listen out for the words I know.

Here are my discoveries today of words in Malay and Indonesian. One word a day for a year would be 365 words. Let's allow for holidays and hospitals and being too busy. 300 words a year. Ten words a day is a really useful 3,000 words a year, of any language you choose. If you are a student, unemployed, or retired, with oodles of time, you could do ten languages a day for five minutes.

English - Malay / Indonesian
apple - apel
black - hitam (You might get hit on a black night. Black and hitam both contain the letter a. The letters l and t are uprights.)
eat / food - makan
have - punya (Both words contain the letter a. Y is a bit like an upside down h. Punya and possess both start with the letter p.)
I - saya (I, myself - letter Y in myself and saya.)

one - satu
two - dua (Looks like dual)
three - tiga (Both start with letter t.)
goodbye - selamat tinggal (selamat like salaam and shalom, s-l-m, meaning peace)
thank you - terimah kasih (The Malay- Indonesian sounds like terribly thankful, Madam, for the cash tip.)

Indonesian / Malay - English
apel - apple
dua - two
hitam - black
makan - eat / food
punya - have / possess

satu - one
saya - I
selamat tinggal - goodbye  termimah kasih - thank you 
tiga - three

Useful Websites For Travellers and Language Learners
LANGUAGES
Earworms 
earwormslearning.com
(This is a shortened version of Berlitz where you hear the words, provided on a disc or download, but the addition of music in the background makes it relaxing when you listen and they claim improves the speed and ease of learning). I bought the German and Spanish, then added other languages when I saw the discs available at low prices second hand on ebay. The booklet is amll and easy to carry. The print is small and hard to read in a poor light at night but much better in daylight, outdoors, such as when waiting at a bus stop.
It is written with the traveller in mind, starting with words you need on a flight.

Duolingo - my absolute favourite system. It's free.
duolingo.com

Author
Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer, author and speaker, teacher of English and other languages. Workshops and speeches for students and businesses. 
Please share links to your favourite posts.


No comments:

Post a Comment