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  2. Chinese Malay literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_Malay_literature

    Chinese Malay literature is the literature of Overseas Chinese in predominant Malay regions, especially Malaysia. It is written in a variety of languages including Malay , English , and Chinese dialects like Mandarin Chinese and Hokkien , and also creoles and mixed languages based on these.

  3. Malaysian literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaysian_literature

    Malaysian literature consists of literature produced in the Malay Peninsula until 1963 and in Malaysia thereafter. Malaysian literature is typically written in any of the country's four main languages: Malay, English, Chinese and Tamil. It portrays various aspects of Malaysian life and comprises an important part of the culture of Malaysia. The ...

  4. Sair Tjerita Siti Akbari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sair_Tjerita_Siti_Akbari

    Lie Kim Hok, author of Siti Akbari. Siti Akbari was written by Lie Kim Hok, a Bogor-born peranakan Chinese who was taught by Dutch missionaries. The missionaries introduced him to European literature, [2] including the works of Dutch writers such as Anna Louisa Geertruida Bosboom-Toussaint and Jacob van Lennep, [3] as well as works by French authors like Jules Verne, Alexandre Dumas, and ...

  5. History of the Malay language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Malay_language

    Proto-Malayic is the language believed to have existed in prehistoric times, spoken by the early Austronesian settlers in the region. Its ancestor, the Proto-Malayo-Polynesian language that derived from Proto-Austronesian, began to break up by at least 2000 BCE as a result possibly by the southward expansion of Austronesian peoples into the Philippines, Borneo, Maluku and Sulawesi from the ...

  6. Lie Kim Hok - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lie_Kim_Hok

    In his history of Chinese Malay literature, Nio Joe Lan finds that Lie, influenced by his missionary education, tried to maintain an orderly use of language in a period where such attention to grammar was uncommon. [45] Nio describes Lie as the "only contemporary peranakan Chinese writer who had studied Malay grammar methodically."

  7. Category:Chinese Malay literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Chinese_Malay...

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  8. List of Malaysian writers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Malaysian_writers

    The following is a list of writers living or residing in Malaysia ordered by their first name. This list includes writers of all genres and in any language. This list includes writers of all genres and in any language.

  9. Classical Malay literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Malay_literature

    The frontispiece of a Jawi edition of the Malay Annals. Classical Malay literature, also known as traditional Malay literature, refers to the Malay-language literature from the Malay world, consisting of areas now part of Brunei, Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia; works from countries such as the Philippines and Sri Lanka have also been included.