halaman bantuan ini memerlukan pemutakhiran informasi. Harap perbarui halaman bantuan dengan menambahkan informasi terbaru yang tersedia.
Seri Bantuan
Selamat datang! Halaman ini memberikan bantuan mengenai hal yang sering ditanyakan di Wikipedia. Untuk memulai, silakan mengeklik pranala yang Anda butuhkan di bawah ini, atau gunakan fitur pencari yang tersedia.
Primary stress Placed before the stressed syllable [10]
Catatan
^ abcdef/p/, /t/, /k/ are unaspirated, as in the Romance languages, or as in English spy, sty, sky. In final position, they are unreleased[p̚,t̪̚,ʔ̚], with final k being a glottal stop. /b,d/ are also unreleased, and therefore devoiced, [p̚,t̚]. There is no liaison: they remain unreleased even when followed by a vowel, as in kulit ubi "potato skins", though they are pronounced as a normal medial consonant when followed by a suffix.
^ abcdeThe fricatives [f,z,ʃ,x] are found in loanwords only. Some speakers pronounce orthographic ‹v› in loanwords as [v]; otherwise it is [f].
^ abcThe glottal stop [ʔ] is an allophone of /k/ and /ɡ/ in the coda: baik, bapak. It is also used between identical vowels in hiatus. Only a few words have this sound in the middle, e.g. bakso (meatballs). It may be represented by an apostrophe in Arabic derived words such as Al Qur'an.
^In traditional Malay areas, the rhotic consonant/r/ is realized as a velar or uvular fricative, [ɣ] or [ʁ], and elided word-finally. Elsewhere, including in Standard Indonesian, it is an alveolar tap [ɾ] or trill [r]. Its position relative to schwa is ambiguous: kertas "paper" may be pronounced [krəˈtas] or [kərəˈtas].
^The nasal consonant/m,n,ŋ,ɲ/nasalize following vowels, and may nasalize a subsequent vowel if the intervening consonant is /h,j,w,ʔ/.
^ abIn Malaysian, word-final /a/ is often reduced to [ə].
^ abcd[e,o] are allophones of /i,u/ in native words, but have become established as distinct phonemes in English and Javanese loan words. The diphthongs /ai,au/, which only occur in open syllables, are often merged into [e,o], respectively, especially in Java.
^The Malay/Indonesian /e/ doesn't quite line up with any English vowel, though the nearest equivalents are the vowel of clay (for most English dialects) and the vowel of get. The Malay/Indonesian vowel is usually articulated at a point between the two.
^ abcd/e,i,o,u/ have laxallophones[ɛ,ɪ,ɔ,ʊ] in closed syllables, except that tense [i,u] occur in stressed syllables with a coda nasal, and laax [ɛ,ɔ] also occur in open syllables if the following syllable contains the same lax vowel.
^Stress generally falls on the penultimate syllable. If that syllable contains a schwa [ə], stress shifts to the antepenult if there is one, and to the final syllable if there is not. Some suffixes are ignored for stress placement.
Artikel bertopik halaman bantuan Wikipedia ini adalah sebuah rintisan. Anda dapat membantu Wikipedia dengan mengembangkannya.