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Rejang (baso Jang, baso Hejang[citation needed]) is an Austronesian language predominantly spoken by the Rejang people in southwestern parts of Sumatra (Bengkulu), Indonesia. There are five dialects, spread from mountainous region to the coastal region of Bengkulu, including the Musi (Musai) dialect, the Lebong dialect, the Kebanagung dialect, the Rawas (Awes) dialect, and the Pesisir dialect.

Rejang
Baso Hejang
Baso Jang
ꤽꥍꤺꥏ
Native toIndonesia
Region
EthnicityRejang people
Native speakers
350,000 (2000 census)[1]
Dialects
  • Lebong
  • Curup
  • Kepahiang
  • Utara
Latin (present)
Rejang script (historically)
Language codes
ISO 639-3rej
Glottologreja1240
   Rejang is the majority language where vast majority are first language speakers
   Rejang is the majority language, with other languages being spoken largely or as a second language
   Rejang is a minority language

Classification

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Rejang is not obviously close to other Malayo-Polynesian languages in Sumatra. McGinn (2009) classified it among the Bidayuh languages of Borneo, closest to Bukar–Sadong. According to the source, these languages shared raising of *a to word-finally, or in final syllables except those ending in velar consonants *k, .[2] It may be that it is related to the newly described language Nasal, but that is speculative at this point.[3] Robert Blust and Alexander Smith classified Rejang as part of Greater North Borneo languages (2017a, 2017b).[4][5][6]

Dialects

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Rejang has five different dialects. Speakers of each dialects are able to communicate with one another, in spite of lexical and phonological differences. The four dialects of Rejangs are Curup, Lebong, Kepahiang, and Utara. Among all dialects, Awes dialect is the hardest for the speakers of other dialects. [citation needed]

Writing system

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Rejang was written with the Rejang script for a long time.[7] The script is thought to predate the introduction of Islam to the area in the 12th century CE, although the earliest attested document has been dated to the mid-18th century. It is traditionally written on bamboo, buffalo horn, bark or copper plates. It was only recently[when?] that the Latin alphabet was introduced as a way of writing the language.

Phonology

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Consonants

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Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Plosive/
Affricate
voiceless p t k ʔ
voiced b d ɡ
Fricative s h
Trill (r)
Lateral l
Approximant w j

A trill /r/ is also present, but only in loanwords.[8]

Vowels

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Front Central Back
Close i u
Mid e ə o
Open a

Vocabulary

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Astronomical terms

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English Lebong Dialect Curup Dialect Kepahiang Dialect Utara Dialect
earth bumai
dênio
dunio
bumêi
dênio
dunio
bumêi
dênio
dunio
bumai
dênio
dunio
star bitang bitang bitang bitang
moon bulên bulên bulên bulên
sun mataibilai matêibilêi matêibilêi
matoibiloi
mataibilai
cloud awên awên awên awên
sky lenget lenget lenget lenget

Gender

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English Lebong Dialect Curup Dialect Kepahiang Dialect Utara Dialect
female slawêi bia, sêbia,
bie, sêbie,
slawie
bêa slawêi
male smanêi sêbong,
smanie
smanêi smanêi
third gender tayuk tayuk tayuk tayuk

Colour

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English Lebong Dialect Curup Dialect Kepahiang Dialect Utara Dialect
red miləak miləak abang miləak
white putiak puteak puteah puteak
black məluo mələu mələa məluo
green ijo ijo ijo ijo
blue biru/blu/blau biru/blu/bləu biru/blu/bləu biru/blu/blau
grey abu-abu/abau abu-abu/abəu abu-abu/abəu abu-abu/abəu
orange jingga jingga jingga jingga
violet ungau ungəu ungəu ungau
brown perang perang perang coklat
pink miləak mudo/miləak jamau miləak mudo/miləak jaməu miləah mudo/miləak jaməu abang mude/miləak jamau
silver pirok pirak pirak pirak
maroon miləak atie miləak atəi abang atəei miləak atəi

Pronouns

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English Lebong Dialect Curup Dialect Kepahiang Dialect Utara Dialect
I uku
ku
uku
ku
uku
u
uku,
ku
you kumu (honour, formal)
ko (common)
kumu (honour, formal)
ko (common)
ko kumu (honour, formal)
ko (common)
we itê itê itê itê
they tobo'o tobo'o toboho tobo'o
he/she si si si si

Numbers

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Numeral English Lebong Dialect Curup Dialect Kepahiang Dialect Utara Dialect
0 zero kosong nol nol nol
1 one do (sometimes dəlai) do (sometimes dəlai) do (sometimes dikup) do (sometimes dəlai)
2 two duai duəi dui duəi
3 three təlau tələu tələu təlau
4 four əpat, pat əpat, pat əpat, pat əpat, pat
5 five ləmo ləmo ləmo ləmo
6 six num num num num
7 seven tujuak tojoak tojoah tojoak
8 eight dəlapən dəlapən dəlapən dəlapən
9 nine semilan semilan semilan semilan
10 ten dəpuluak dəpoloak dəpoloah dəpoloak
11 eleven səblas səblas səblas səblas
12 twelve duai bəlas duəi bəlas dui bəlas duəi balas
13 thirteen təlau bəlas tələu bəlas tələu bəlas təlau bəlas
19 nineteen seilan bəlas semilan bəlas semilan bəlas semilan bəlas
20 twenty duai puluak duəi poloak dui poloah duəi poloak
21 twenty-one duai puluak satu duəi poloak satu dui poloah satu duəi poloak do
50 fifty ləmo puluak ləmo poloak ləmo poloah ləmo poloak
100 one hundred sotos sotos sotos sotos
200 two hundred duai otos duəi otos dui otos duəi otos
1000 one thousand səribau səribeu səribeu səribau
10,000 ten thousand dəpuluak ribau dəpoloak ribəu dəpoloah ribəu dəpoloak ribau
100,000 one hundred thousand sotos ribau sotos ribəu sotos ribəu sotos ribau
1,000,000 one million dəjuta dəjuta dəjuta dəjuta

Days of the week

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English Lebong Dialect Curup Dialect Kepahiang Dialect Utara Dialect
Monday sənin sənin sənin sənin
Tuesday səlasa səlasa səlasa səlasa
Wednesday rabau/rabu/rəbau rabəu/rabu/rəbəu rabəu/rabu/rəbəu rebaa/rəbu/rəbəu
Thursday kəmis kəmis kəmis kəmis
Friday jəm'at/jum'at jəma'at/jum'at jəmahat/jum'at jəm'at/jum'at
Saturday sabtau/səbtau/səbtu sabtəu seteu sabtau/səbtau
Sunday mingau mingəu mingəu mingəu

Prepositions

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Place

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English Lebong Dialect Curup Dialect Kepahiang Dialect Utara Dialect
behind bêlakang
kədong
bêlakang
kêdong
bêlakang
kêdong
bêlakang
kêdong
beside dêpêak
pêak
dêpêak
pêak
dêpêah
pêah
saping
dêpêak
pêak
above das das das das
in front of muko muko adep muko
outside luêa luêa luêh luêa
inside lêm lêm lêm lêm
corner iding iding iding iding
under bêak bêak bêah bêak
between antaro antaro antaro antaro

Basic elements

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English Lebong Dialect Curup Dialect Kepahiang Dialect Utara Dialect
wind angin angin angin angin
water bioa bioa bioa bioa
land tanêak tanêak tanəah tanəak
soil pitok pitak pitak pitak
air udaro udaro udaro udaro
fire opoi opoi opoe opoi

Sample text

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The following is a sample text in Rejang, of Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (by the United Nations):

Kutê tun laher mêrdeka, tmuan hok-hok gik srai. Kutê nagiak-ba akêa peker ngen atêi, kêrno o kêlok-nê bêkuat-ba do ngen luyên lêm asai sêpasuak.

Gloss (word-to-word):

Article 1 – All human was born independent, has an equal rights. They are endowed a way to think and heart; then they need to be friend[clarification needed] each other in the taste of brotherhood.

Translation (grammatical):

Article 1 – All human beings are born free and equal in rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

Notes

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  1. ^ Rejang at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ McGinn, Richard (2009). "24. Out-of-Borneo subgrouping hypothesis for Rejang: re-weighing the evidence" (PDF). In Adelaar, Alexander; Pawley, Andre (eds.). Austronesian historical linguistics and culture history: a festschrift for Bob Blust. Pacific Linguistics. pp. 397–410. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 January 2014. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
  3. ^ "Request for New Language Code Element in ISO 639-3" (PDF), ISO 639-3 Registration Authority
  4. ^ Blust 2010, pp. 44, 47.
  5. ^ Smith 2017a, p. 346–364.
  6. ^ Smith 2017b, p. 459–460.
  7. ^ Rejang (Redjang, Kaganga), ScriptSource (developed and maintained by SIL International), retrieved 30 May 2019
  8. ^ Aichele, W. (1984). A Fragmentary Sketch of the Rejang Language. Materials for a Rejang-Indonesian-English dictionary (Pacific Linguistics: Series D, 58.): Canberra: Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)

Bibliography

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  • Richard McGinn, Archive of Materials for the Study of the Rejang of Sumatra. Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine