Indonesian/Lessons/Pronunciation
( | )Indonesian Language Course | (discussion) |
Learning the Indonesian Language • Downloadable and Print Versions
Lessons •
Grammar •
Appendices •
Texts •
About •
Q&A •
Planning
|
Examples
[edit | edit source]Three ways to pronounce e:
- bel ( = bell )
- lebih ( = more )
- beda ( = different )
Two ways to pronounce o:
- toko ( = shop )
- bongkah ( = lump )
Catatan (Notes)
[edit | edit source]The Indonesian language lacks the letters q, v, x, and z. These letters were incorporated to accommodate foreign words. Even f is due to the influence of the Arabic alphabet.
A pair of the same vowel in succession are pronounced differently than just prolonging the vowel sound; rather, there is a slight pause between the vowels. For example: The word maaf, which means sorry, is pronounced as ma (slight pause) af.
There are four compound consonants (diphthongs): ng, ny, kh, and sy. Although they do not constitute new letters, they are pronounced differently:
Compound | Pronunciation | IPA | Sound |
---|---|---|---|
ng | eng | [ŋ] (not [ŋɡ]) | Like the soft ng in English, e.g. banging, singing. It is incorrect to pronounce it like bingo or mango (i.e. the hard ng). To pronounce the hard ng, we would use ngg instead (which are not considered as compound by itself). Except for the name of an Indonesian city Tangerang, where it pronounced with /ŋɡ/. |
ny | nye | [ɲ] | Like the ny in canyon. Much like the ñ sound in Spanish. |
kh | kha | [x] | Like the ch in Lochness, or soft g in Spanish: gente |
sy | sya | [ʃ] | Like the sh in shoe or ship |
As is the case with the standalone letters, only ng and ny are native to Indonesian. Both kh and sy only appear in words with Arabic origin, but sy are also exists in non-native words from non-Arabic origin but it is much rarely, like fesyen (fashion).
Examples
[edit | edit source]Sungai (= River) → Soft ng
Bangga (= Proud) → Hard ng, note the ngg
Banyak (= A lot)
Akhir (= End)
Khalik (= The Creator/God, mainly used in poems or Islamic texts)
Go to Exercise: Indonesian Rhymes
Tahu (to know) & tahu (tofu)
[edit | edit source]Tahu meaning to know: the h is silent, and the word is pronounced to rhyme with bau (smell) (i.e. similarly to the English word Tao (Chinese philosophy) or Greek alphabet Tau.)
Tahu meaning tofu is pronounced "tah-who"
You can practice saying "Saya tidak tahu. Saya bukan tahu." ("I don't know. I am not tofu.") The pronunciation should be different in the two cases.
Final ai
[edit | edit source]In everyday Indonesian, the "ai" at the end of a root word is pronounced as e or ek (the k being a glottal stop, not an aspirated k). In informal writing (e.g. email) Indonesians sometimes spell this way as well, e.g. capek instead of capai.
Teacher's notes
[edit | edit source]It is advisable to distribute this material through other lessons, rather than learning all these exceptions at once.
Lessons
Information • Introductory • Print Versions • Q&A • Planning
Basic: Learning Indonesian • The Alphabet • Greetings • This and that • Pronouns • Simple Sentences • Numbers • Rainbow • Prepositions
Beginner: Introducing Yourself • My Body • My Family • My Home • At School • At Work • To the Market • What Time is it? • Happy Birthday! • Going to Bali
Expert: Me and you • Slang language • Money • Transportation
( ) |
Indonesian : Print Versions • Lessons • Grammar • Appendices • Texts • About • Q&A • Planning |
(discussion) |