Malay phonology

This article explains the phonology of the Malay language based on the pronunciation of Standard Malay, which is the official language of Brunei, Singapore, Malaysia (as Malaysian) and Indonesia (as Indonesian).

Consonants

The consonants of Standard Malay[1] and also Indonesian[2] are shown below. Non-native consonants that only occur in borrowed words, principally from Arabic and English, are shown in parentheses. Some analyses list 19 "primary consonants" for Malay as the 18 symbols that are not in parentheses in the table as well as the glottal stop [ʔ].[3][4]

Consonant phonemes of Standard Malay
Labial Dental Alveolar Post-alv./
Palatal
Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Stop voiceless p t t͡ʃ k (ʔ)
voiced b d d͡ʒ ɡ
Fricative voiceless (f) (θ) s (ʃ) (x) h
voiced (v) (ð) (z) (ɣ)
Approximant l j w
Trill r

Orthographic note: The sounds are represented orthographically by their symbols as above, except:

  • /ɲ/ is written ny before a vowel, n before c and j
  • /ŋ/ is written ng
  • the glottal stop [ʔ] is written as a final k or an apostrophe '
  • // is written c
  • // is written j
  • /j/ is written y
  • /ʃ/ is written sy
  • /x/ is written kh
  • /ɣ/ is written gh
  • /ð/ is written z and transcribed into /z/
  • /θ/ is written s and transcribed into /s/. Before 1972, this sound was written th in Standard Malay (but not Indonesian).

Notes

  • /p/, /t/, /k/ are unaspirated, as in the Romance languages, or as in English spy, sty, sky. In word-final position, they are often unreleased, with final /k/ generally being realised as a glottal stop in native words. There is no liaison, that is, no audible release even when followed by a vowel in another word, as in kulit ubi ('tapioca skins'), though they are pronounced as a normal medial consonant when followed by a suffix.
  • The glottal stop [ʔ] may be represented by an apostrophe in Arabic derived words such as Al Qur'an.
  • /h/ is pronounced clearly between like vowels, as in Pahang. Elsewhere it is a very light sound, and is frequently silent, as in hutan ~ utan ('forest'), sahut ~ saut ('answer'). The exception to this tendency is initial /h/ from Arabic loans such as hakim ('judge').
  • /r/ varies significantly across dialects. In addition, its position relative to schwa is ambiguous: kertas ('paper') may be pronounced [krəˈtas] or [kərəˈtas]. The trill /r/ is sometimes reduced to a single vibration when single, making it phonetically a flap [ɾ], so that the pronunciation of a single /r/ varies between trill [r], flap [ɾ] and, in some instances, postalveolar approximant [ɹ̠].
  • /f/, /v/, /z/, /ʃ/, /ð/ and /θ/ only appear in loanwords. Some speakers pronounce /v/ in loanwords as [v], otherwise it is [f]. [z] can also be an allophone of /s/ before voiced consonants. Since /ð/ and /z/ are written identically in Malay, as with /θ/ and /s/, /ð/ and /θ/ tend to only occur in speakers who speak the source language the words are loaned from (Arabic or English) and are aware whether the sound was originally dental or alveolar.

Loans from Arabic:

  • Phonemes which occur only in Arabic loans may be pronounced distinctly by speakers who know Arabic, otherwise they tend to be substituted with native sounds.
Table of borrowed Arabic consonants
DistinctAssimilatedExample
/x//k/, /h/khabar خَبَرْ [ˈhabar], kabar [ˈkabar] ('news')
/ð//d/, /l/redha, rela ('good will')
/ðˤ//l/, /z/lohor, zohor ('noon prayer')
/ɣ//ɡ/, /r/ghaib, raib ('hidden')
/ʕ//ʔ/saat, sa'at ('time')

Nasal assimilation

Important in the derivation of Malay verbs and nouns is the assimilation of the nasal consonant at the end of the derivational prefixes meng- /məŋ/, a verbal prefix, and peng- /pəŋ/, a nominal prefix.

The nasal segment is dropped before sonorant consonants (nasals /m, n, ɲ, ŋ/, liquids /l, r/, and approximants /w, j/). It is retained before and assimilates to obstruent consonants: labial /m/ before labial /p, b/, alveolar /n/ before alveolar /t, d/, post-alveolar /ɲ/ before /tʃ, dʒ/ and /s/, velar /ŋ/ before other sounds (velar /k, ɡ/, glottal /h/, all vowels).[5]

In addition, following voiceless obstruents, apart from /tʃ/ (that is /p, t, s, k/), are dropped.

That is, meng- produces the following derivations:

rootmeng- derivation
masakmemasak
nantimenanti
layangmelayang
rampasmerampas
belimembeli
dukungmendukung
jawabmenjawab (/məɲ/-)
gulungmenggulung
hantarmenghantar
rootmeng- derivation
ajarmengajar
isimengisi
pilihmemilih
tulismenulis
cabutmencabut (/məɲ/-)
kenalmengenal
suratmenyurat

Vowels

It is usually said that there are six vowels in Standard Malay[1][6] and Indonesian.[2] These six vowels are shown in the table below. However, other analyses set up a system with other vowels, particularly the open-mid vowels /ɛ/ and /ɔ/.[7]

Table of vowel phonemes of Standard Malay
Front Central Back
Close i u
Mid e ə o
Open a
Table of vowel phonemes of Indonesian
Front Central Back
Close [i]
i
[u]
u
Close-Mid [e]
é
[ə]
ê
[o]
o
Open-Mid [ɛ]
è
[ɔ]
o
Open [a]
a

Phonological notes:

  1. One source of variation in Malay is whether final /a/ in open final syllables of root morphemes (for example saya 'I') is pronounced as [a] or as [ə]. So called 'a varieties', such as Indonesian or the varieties of Sarawak, Sabah or Brunei, pronounce it as [a], while 'schwa varieties' such as some peninsular Malaysian varieties (Comprising the states from Selangor to Johor) and the varieties of Singapore and Sumatra pronounce it as [ə].[1][8] In schwa varieties, /a/ of the penultimate syllable is also modified if it is followed by /h/, as in usaha [usəhə]. /a/ does not change to [ə] in singing.
  2. In closed final syllables of root morphemes, the front vowel /i/ and back vowel /u/ are usually pronounced as [e] and [o], respectively, in Malaysian (except East Malaysia) and Malay of Singapore and Sumatra (where the language is native), and [ɪ] and [ʊ] in Indonesian.
  3. The above allophony notwithstanding, the vowels [e] and [o] must be accorded phonemic status, as they occur in native words in all Malay dialects and in Arabic, Persian, Portuguese, English, Dutch, and Javanese loan words, and in foreign names. /e/ and /o/ may vary between different speakers as they are popularly pronounced as mid in Malaysian and close-mid in Indonesian. /i/ and /u/ are pronounced the same in Brunei and East Malaysia (Sabah and Sarawak).
  4. Word-final [e] and [o] are rare in Malay, except for loanwords, like teko (teapot, from Min Nan 茶壺 tekoh), toko (small shop, from Min Nan 土庫 thó͘-khò͘), semberono (careless, from Javanese sembrono), gede (Javanese of big), konde (from Javanese kondhe, bulbous hairdo or hair extension on the back of the head), kare (Indonesian term of curry, variation of kari, from Tamil kai), mestizo (from Spanish), kredo (creed, from Latin credo), resiko (risk, from Dutch risico), and non-Malay Indonesian names, like Manado and Suharto.
  5. Some words borrowed from European languages have the vowels [ɛ] and [ɔ], such as pek [pɛk] ('pack') and kos [kɔs] ('cost'). Words borrowed earlier have a more nativized pronunciation, such as pesta ('fest'), which is pronounced [pestə]. In Indonesian, [ɛ] and [ɔ] are allophones of /e/ and /o/ in closed final syllables.
  6. Some district dialects differentiate close-mid and open-mid (front and back) vowels. Examples are in the Kedahan dialect:
    1. [modɛ] (modal) ('modal')
    2. [bɔrak] (bohong) ('lie')
  7. [ɑ] is an occasional allophone of /a/ after or before more carefully pronounced consonants from Arabic words. Example: qari [qɑri].
  8. Some district dialects differentiate open front and back vowels. Example: [ɡulaː] (gulai, the Perak River dialect).
  9. There is also a [ɪ] in Indonesian, but is an allophone of [i] as the second vowel in a hiatus such as air ('water') [a.ɪr], but see below.
  10. The vowels [e] ⟨é⟩, [ɛ] ⟨è⟩ and [ə] ⟨ê⟩ are commonly written without diacritics in Indonesian as ⟨e⟩.[9] The inclusion of diacritics is for clarity, as in a dictionary.

Diphthongs

Some analyses claim that Malay has three native diphthong phonemes only in open syllables; they are:

  • /ai̯/: kedai ('shop'), pandai ('clever')
  • /au̯/: kerbau ('buffalo')
  • /oi̯/: dodoi, amboi

Others assume that these "diphthongs" are actually a monophthong followed by an approximant, so ai represents /aj/, au represents /aw/, and oi represents /oj/. On this basis, there are no phonological diphthongs in Malay.[10]

Words borrowed from English with /eɪ/, such as Mei ('May') and esei ('essay') are pronounced with /e/. This feature also happens to English /oʊ/ which becomes /o/.

Diphthongs are differentiated from two vowels in two syllables, such as:

  • /a.ʔi/: e.g. rai ('celebrate') [ra.ʔi], air ('water') [a.ʔer] (or [a.ɪr] in Indonesia and [a.ʔir] elsewhere)
  • /a.ʔu/: bau ('smell') [ba.ʔu], laut ('sea') [la.ʔot] (or [la.ʊt] in Indonesia and [la.ʔut] elsewhere)

Even if it is not differentiated in modern Rumi spelling, diphthongs and two vowels are differentiated in the spelling in Jawi, where a vowel hiatus is indicated by the symbol hamzah ء, for example: لاءوت laut ('sea').

The vowel hiatuses below are two different vowels but pronounced as diphthongs.

  • /ia/: meriah ('lively')
  • /iu/: liur ('saliva')
  • /ua/: luar ('outside')
  • /ui/: kelui ('paging')

Stress

Malay has light stress that falls on either the final or penultimate syllable, depending on regional variations as well as the presence of the schwa (/ə/) in a word. It is generally the penultimate syllable that is stressed, unless its vowel is a schwa /ə/. If the penult has a schwa, then stress moves to the ante-penultimate syllable if there is one, even if that syllable has a schwa as well; if the word is disyllabic, the stress is final. In disyllabic words with a closed penultimate syllable, such as tinggal ('stay') and rantai ('chain'), stress falls on the penult.

However, there is some disagreement among linguists over whether stress is phonemic (unpredictable), with some analyses suggesting that there is no underlying stress in Malay.[1][11][12]

Rhythm

The classification of languages based on rhythm can be problematic.[13] Nevertheless, acoustic measurements suggest that Malay has more syllable-based rhythm than British English,[14] even though doubts remain about whether the syllable is the appropriate unit for the study of Malay prosody.[11]

Syllable structure

Most of the native lexicon is based on disyllabic root morphemes, with a small percentage of monosyllabic and trisyllabic roots.[15] However, with the widespread occurrence of prefixes and suffixes, many words of five or more syllables are found.[1]

Syllables are basically consonant–vowel–consonant (CVC), where the V is a monophthong and the final C may be an approximant, either /w/ or /j/. (See the discussion of diphthongs above.)

References

  1. Clynes, A., & Deterding, D. (2011). Standard Malay (Brunei). Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 41, 259–268.On-line Version
  2. Soderberg, Craig D.; Olson, Kenneth S. (2008). "Indonesian". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 38 (2): 209–213. doi:10.1017/S0025100308003320.
  3. Asmah Haji Omar (2008). Ensiklopedia Bahasa Melayu. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka, page 108.
  4. Yunus Maris, M. (1980). The Malay Sound System. Kuala Lumpur: Penerbit Fajar Bakti Sdn. Bhd, page 52.
  5. This is the argument for the nasal being underlyingly /ŋ/: when there is no place for it to assimilate to, it surfaces as /ŋ/. Some treatments write it /N/ to indicate that it has no place of articulation of its own, but this fails to explain its pronunciation before vowels.
  6. Asmah Haji Omar (2008). Ensiklopedia Bahasa Melayu. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka, page 97.
  7. Yunus Maris, M. (1980). The Malay Sound System. Kuala Lumpur: Penerbit Fajar Bakti Sdn. Bhd, page 2.
  8. Asmah Haji Omar. (1977). The phonological diversity of the Malay dialects. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
  9. Pedoman Umum Ejaan Bahasa Indonesia (PDF). Jakarta: Kementerian Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan Republik Indonesia. 2015.
  10. Clynes, Adrian (1997). "On the Proto-Austronesian "Diphthongs"". Oceanic Linguistics. 36 (2): 347–362. doi:10.2307/3622989. JSTOR 3622989.
  11. Zuraidah Mohd Don, Knowles, G., & Yong, J. (2008). How words can be misleading: A study of syllable timing and "stress" in Malay. The Linguistics Journal 3(2). See here
  12. Gil, David. "A Typology of Stress, And Where Malay/Indonesian Fits In (abstract only)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-25. Retrieved 2012-03-25.
  13. Roach, P. (1982). On the distinction between 'stress-timed' and 'syllable-timed' languages. In D. Crystal (Ed.), Linguistic Controversies (pp.73–79). London: Edward Arnold.
  14. Deterding, D. (2011). Measurements of the rhythm of Malay. In Proceedings of the 17th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Hong Kong, 17–21 August 2011, pp. 576–579. On-line Version
  15. Adelaar, K.A. (1992). Proto-Malayic: The reconstruction of its phonology and parts of its lexicon and morphology (PDF). Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, The Australian National University. doi:10.15144/pl-c119.

Bibliography

  • Indirawati Haji Zahid, Mardian Shah Omar (2006). Fonetik dan fonologi. PTS Professional. ISBN 983-3585-63-9. Retrieved 24 December 2009.
  • Abdullah bin Hassan (2007). "6". Linguistik am. PTS Professional. ISBN 978-983-3376-18-6. Retrieved 24 December 2009.
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