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Jack Jia is an American entrepreneur. He is known for founding and leading Musely (formerly Trusper), an online platform to provide skincare medical treatments through technology, as its chief executive officer since its launch in November 2017.
Pronunciation of certain loanwords in Malaysian Malay follows English, while in Indonesian it follows Dutch, for example Malay "televisyen" (from English: television) and Indonesian "televisi" (from Dutch: televisie); the "-syen" and "-si" also prevail in some other words, though "-si" has become more preferred in Malay of late like generasi ...
Dhalang plays the wayang.. Sulukan normally refers to mood setting songs by a puppeteer in Javanese wayang ("puppet") performances in Indonesia.The term can also refer to the pathetan pieces played before and after gamelan pieces in a non-wayang context, [1] and to mystical poetry relating to the doctrinal meaning of the term sulook.
Malay Indonesians (Malay/Indonesian: Orang Melayu Indonesia; Jawi: اورڠ ملايو ايندونيسيا ) are ethnic Malays living throughout Indonesia. They are one of the indigenous peoples of the country. [5] Indonesian, the national language of Indonesia, is a standardized form of Riau Malay.
The program was first sold publicly as Keynote 1.0 in 2003, competing against existing presentation software, most notably Microsoft PowerPoint. [ 7 ] In 2005, Apple began selling Keynote 2.0 in conjunction with Pages , a new word processing and page layout application, in a software package called iWork.
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Eat Bulaga! Indonesia was an Indonesian variety show produced and aired by SCTV.It served as the original Indonesian franchisee of the Philippines' longest-running noon-time variety show, Eat Bulaga! which was then-produced by the Philippine television production company Television and Production Exponents, Inc. (TAPE).
The Van Ophuijsen Spelling System was the Romanized standard orthography for the Indonesian language from 1901 to 1947. [1] Before the Van Ophuijsen Spelling System was in force, the Malay language (and consequently Indonesian) in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) did not have a standardized spelling, or was written in the Jawi script.