Kangean language

Austronesian language spoken in Indonesia
  • Bĕsa Kangéan
  • Besa Kangayan
  • Ocak Kangean
  • Ocaq Kangayan
Native toIndonesiaRegionKangean IslandsEthnicity
  • Kangeanese
Native speakers
110,000 (2000 census)[1]
Language family
Austronesian
  • Malayo-Polynesian
    • Malayo-Sumbawan (?)
      • Madurese
        • Kangean
Dialects
  • Western Kangean
  • Eastern Kangean
Writing system
  • Latin
  • Carakan
  • Lontaraq
  • Mangkasaraq
  • Pegon
Official statusRegulated by Language Development and Fostering Agency
  • East Java Language Center
Language codesISO 639-3kkvGlottologkang1289This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Kangean or Kangeanese (referred to as Besa Kangean or Ocaq Kangean by local people) is a language spoken by the Kangeanese,[2] which is an ethnic group originating from Kangean Island in the Kangean Islands region, north of the Bali Sea.[3][4][5] It is native to Kangean and the surrounding islands. Kangean lies to the north of Bali, the northwest of Lombok and the east of Madura. The Kangean language is closely related to Madurese and partly mutually intelligible with it, and is often considered a dialect of Madurese.[6]

Writing System

Examined from an ethnolinguistic point of view (so far) from the discovery of inscriptions in the Kangean Islands, the original Kangean language is not known or it can be concluded that so far it does not have its own traditional script. From time to time, the use of scripts from other languages was used to write Kangean-language literature, including the Carakan (Javanese), Lontaraq, Mangkasaraq, Pegon, and Latin scripts which are now very dominantly used.

Latin

The Kangean language is now generally written in the 26-letter Latin script, but the use of the letters X and Z is generally rare in everyday life except in names. In Dutch colonial times, the Latin script used in Kangean had diacritics like the Latin script for Old Javanese used to distinguish sounds in words; for example, the word tepaq (transl. har. "appropriate") used to be written as tĕppaq, but nowadays Kangean tends to be written without diacritics and has undergone spelling standardization following Javanese spelling but simpler (for example, the word bathik in Javanese would be spelled as batik in Kangean).

Uppercase Lowercase IPA
A a /aː/
B b /bʱeː/
C c /t͡ʃeː/
D d /d̪eː/
E e /eː/
F f /ɛf/
G g /geː/
H h /haː/
I i /iː/
J j /d͡ʒeː/
K k /kaː/
L l /ɛl/
M m /ɛm/
N n /ɛn/
O o /oː/
P p /peː/
Q q /kɪ/
R r /ɛr/
S s /ɛs/
T t /teː/
U u /uː/
V v /veː/
W w /weː/
X x /eːks/
Y y /jeː/
Z z /zɛt/

References

  1. ^ Kangean at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ Kangean Speaking Peoples - Joshua Project
  3. ^ H. N. Kiliaan (1897). "Kangeansch. In Morphology and Syntaxis". Madoereesche Spraakkunst. Batavia: Landsdrukkerij: 153-176.
  4. ^ Eberhard, David M.; Simons, Gary F.; Fennig, Charles D. (2021). "Ethnologue: Languages of the World". Dallas: SIL International. Archived from the original on 2021-10-04. Retrieved 2021-09-18.
  5. ^ "Kangean language" [Bahasa Kangean]. Glottolog 4.4.
  6. ^ Sofyan, Akhmad (2010). "Fonologi Bahasa Madura". Humaniora. 22 (2): 207–218. doi:10.22146/jh.1337 (inactive 2024-04-26).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of April 2024 (link)
Kangean language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator
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