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Colloquial Indonesian the complete course for beginners Sutanto Atmosumarto Book and Audio Cds

Colloquial Indonesian the complete course for beginners Sutanto Atmosumarto Book and Audio Cds

Colloquial Indonesian

The complete course for beginners

Book and 2 x 60 minute audio CDs

Get other Indonesian Audio and Books click here

lonely planet indonesian phrasebook australia

Colloquial Indonesian Book and 2 Audio CDs   

COLLOQUIAL INDONESIAN is easy to use and completely up to date!

Specially written by an experienced teacher for self-study or class use, the course offers you a step-by-step approach to written and spoken Indonesian. No prior knowledge of the language is required.

What makes COLLOQUIAL INDONESIAN your best choice in personal language learning?

  • Interactive – lots of exercises for regular practice
  • Clear – concise grammar notes
  • Practical – useful vocabulary and pronunciation guide
  • Complete - including answer key and reference section

By the end of this rewarding course you will be able to communicate confidently and effectively in Indonesian in a broad range of everyday situations.

This pack contains the book and two 60-minute CDs. Recorded by native speakers, these will help develop your listening and pronunciation skills.

About the Indonesian Language

Indonesian is usually a member belonging to the Austronesian language group. 2 main different types of the Malayan stock are spoken and scripted in Se Asia as well as islands of the archipelago: (a) Bahasa Indonesia, the state run language of Indonesia, spoken by around 170 million; Bahasa Malaysia, the state run language of Malaysia, Singapore, as well as Sultanate of Brunei, spoken by around 20 million. Phonologically and morphologically. the two forms are practically identical. Nor there has to be much variations in vocabulary, though local Indonesian variations are frequent.

Dating back while in the ninth to 12th centuries AD Malay was in use as the administrative language of Hindu rule in Sriwijaya (south-east Sumatra). It continued to be very much accustomed through the suceeding ages under the Sultans of Malacca: on one hand, as Classical Malay. the highly organized vehicle of a rich and extensive literature, and so on the other as the lingua franca for all of the peoples who lived in the neighborhood. In this 2nd form it was known as Melayu Pasar - 'Bazaar Malay'.

Noisy many years of the twentieth century it seemed likely that Dutch would emerge as the language of administration, higher education as well as cultural media in the archipelago, and, in keeping with this, the claims of Dutch were promoted even by Indonesian intellectuals (e.g. the Budi Utomo Association). Resistance to this policy grew at an equal rate with all the rise of nationalism, and in 1928, at a summit in Batavia, the ideal of a national Indonesian language was first promulgated. For such a national Indonesian language there could possibly be just one single base -Malay, the most widely used and understood from the languages of Indonesia. Curiously, by forbidding employing Dutch, the Japanese occupation fuelled this movement. On 17 August 1945. Bahasa Indonesia was formally adopted as the national language of the Republic of Indonesia.

A 'perfected spelling' for Indonesian was suggested by the Indonesian Ministry of Education in 1972. The primary change here is the fact that y everywhere replaces the j earlier used under Dutch influence: e.g. jang > yang. j and c now express the voiced and unvoiced affricates. Modern Bahasa Malaysia can also be written in rumi. the jawi (Arabic) script being reserved for religious texts.

Colloquial Indonesian Book and 2 Audio CDs   

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