Malay language

Malay
Bahasa Melayu
بهاس ملايو
Pronunciation[baˈha.sa məˈla.ju]
Native toBrunei, Christmas Island, Cocos (Keeling) Islands, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, South Thailand
Ethnicity
SpeakersL1: 82 million (2004–2010)
Total (L1 and L2): 290 million (2009) (the number includes "Indonesian" speakers)
Early forms
Standard forms
Manually Coded Malay
Official status
Official language in
Recognised minority
language in
Regulated by
Language codes
ISO 639-1ms
ISO 639-2may (B)
msa (T)
ISO 639-3msa – inclusive code
Individual codes:
zlm  Malay (individual language)
ind  Indonesian
zsm  Standard Malay
abs  Ambon Malay
mbf  Baba Malay
pea  Baba Indonesian
mhp  Balinese Malay
bjn  Banjarese
mfb  Bangka
btj  Bacan
bew  Betawi
bve  Berau
kxd  Brunei Malay
ccm  Chetty Malay
coa  Cocos Malay
liw  Col
goq  Gorap
hji  Haji
jax  Jambi Malay
vkk  Kaur
meo  Kedah Malay
mfa  Kelantan-Pattani Malay
kvr  Kerinci
mqg  Kota Bangun Kutai
mkn  Kupang Malay
mfp  Makassar Malay
xmm  Manado Malay
min  Minangkabau
mui  Musi
zmi  Negeri Sembilan
max  North Moluccan Malay
pmy  Papuan Malay
pel  Pekal
msi  Sabah Malay
sci  Sri Lanka Malay language
pse  South Barisan Malay
vkt  Tenggarong Kutai Malay
Glottolognucl1806
Linguasphere31-MFA-a
Areas where Malay is spoken:
  Indonesia
  Malaysia
  Singapore and Brunei, where Standard Malay is an official language
  East Timor, where Dili Malay is a Malay creole language and Indonesian is used as a working language
  Southern Thailand and the Cocos Isl., where other varieties of Malay are spoken
Varieties of Malay in Southeast Asia:
  Malay language as the majority
  Malay language as the minority

Malay (UK: /məˈl/ mə-LAY, US: /ˈml/ MAY-lay; Malay: Bahasa Melayu, Jawi: بهاس ملايو) is an Austronesian language spoken primarily by Malays in several islands of Maritime Southeast Asia and the Malay Peninsula on the mainland Asia. The language is an official language of Brunei, Malaysia, and Singapore. Indonesian, a standardized variety of Malay, is the official language of Indonesia and one of the working languages of East Timor. Malay is also spoken as a regional language of ethnic Malays in Indonesia and the southern part of Thailand. Altogether, it is spoken by 60 million people across Maritime Southeast Asia.

The language is pluricentric and a macrolanguage, i.e., a group of mutually intelligible speech varieties, or dialect continuum, that have no traditional name in common, and which may be considered distinct languages by their speakers. Several varieties of it are standardized as the national language (bahasa kebangsaan or bahasa nasional) of several nation states with various official names: in Malaysia, it is designated as either Bahasa Melayu ("Malay language") or in some instances, Bahasa Malaysia ("Malaysian language"); in Singapore and Brunei, it is called Bahasa Melayu ("Malay language") where it in the latter country refers to a formal standard variety set apart from its own vernacular dialect; in Indonesia, an autonomous normative variety called Bahasa Indonesia ("Indonesian language") is designated the bahasa persatuan/pemersatu ("unifying language" or lingua franca) whereas the term "Malay" (bahasa Melayu) refers to vernacular varieties of Malay indigenous to areas of Central to Southern Sumatra and West Kalimantan as the ethnic languages of Malay in Indonesia.

Classical Malay, also called Court Malay, was the literary standard of the pre-colonial Malacca and Johor Sultanates and so the language is sometimes called Malacca, Johor or Riau Malay (or various combinations of those names) to distinguish it from the various other Malayic languages. According to Ethnologue 16, several of the Malayic varieties they currently list as separate languages, including the Orang Asli varieties of the Malay Peninsula, are so closely related to standard Malay that they may prove to be dialects. There are also several Malay trade and creole languages (e.g. Ambonese Malay) based on a lingua franca derived from Classical Malay as well as Makassar Malay, which appears to be a mixed language.