When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Malayness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malayness

    Non-Muslims and non-Malays could be labelled as Malays as long as they spoke and wrote Malay and followed a Malay way of life, or if they Masuk Melayu—meaning, don certain clothes, follow certain culinary practices, and become an integral part of the Malay-speaking trading network.

  3. Languages of Malaysia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Malaysia

    The status as a national language is codified in Article 152 of the constitution, [7] further strengthened by the passage of the National Language Act 1963/67. This standard Malay is often a second language following use of related Malayic languages spoken within Malaysia (excluding the Ibanic) identified by local scholars as "dialects" (loghat ...

  4. Malay language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malay_language

    Malay is the national language in Malaysia by Article 152 of the Constitution of Malaysia, and became the sole official language in West Malaysia in 1968, and in East Malaysia gradually from 1974. English continues, however, to be widely used in professional and commercial fields and in the superior courts. Other minority languages are also ...

  5. Culture of Malaysia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Malaysia

    The government has historically made little distinction between "Malay culture" and "Malaysian culture". [8] The Malays, who account for over half the Malaysian population, [1] play a dominant role politically and are included in a grouping identified as bumiputra. Their native language, Bahasa Malaysia, is the national language of the country. [9]

  6. Malays (ethnic group) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malays_(ethnic_group)

    The Malay language is one of the most prominent languages of the world, especially of the Austronesian family. Variants and dialects of Malay are used as an official language in Brunei, Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore. The language is also spoken in southern Thailand, Cocos Islands, Christmas Island, Sri Lanka.

  7. Malaysian Malays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaysian_Malays

    Malay is the national language, and the most commonly spoken language in Malaysia, where it is estimated that 20 percent of all native speakers of Malay live. [34] The terminology as per federal government policy is Bahasa Malaysia (literally "Malaysian language") [ 35 ] but in the federal constitution continues to refer to the official ...

  8. Malay folklore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malay_folklore

    Malay folklore refers to a series of knowledges, traditions and taboos that have been passed down through many generations in oral, written and symbolic forms among the indigenous populations of Maritime Southeast Asia .

  9. Malayisation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malayisation

    In other words, Singapore's Malayness was a creolised culture, closer in character to the Pesisir (coastal) Malay culture that had developed elsewhere in the archipelago than to the kind of Malayness that characterised the Malay world proper of the peninsula and Sumatra. In Singapore itself, assimilation to Malayness was and is purely cultural ...