Siti Ruhaizah Che Mat - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Areas of interest in applied linguistics, general linguistics, comparative linguistics, geolinguistics.
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Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin, Terengganu, Malaysia
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Papers by Siti Ruhaizah Che Mat
Open Journal of Modern Linguistics, 2015
Contact between speakers of clusters of Malay dialects of the Malay Peninsula and Sumatera has be... more Contact between speakers of clusters of Malay dialects of the Malay Peninsula and Sumatera has been going on from historical times until today. This study discusses contacts as reflected in the literary genres of the syair and the hikayat. A research was conducted on a real life situation of the contact of the Bengkulu dialect cluster of Sumatera and that of the southern peninsula Malay dialect in a Bengkulu settler community in the latter region, to assess the receptivity of the speakers of the minority settler community of the norms of the host region. The findings showed that although there was adaptation on the part of the minority community, it did not come readily. Norms that determine the preferred use and usage of language, as well as the social pragmatics of adaptation are the motivating factors for acceptance. Stability of the minority as part of a larger community leads to uninhibited awareness of the traditions of the (former's) parent community, which in turn motivates a regeneration of erstwhile practices.
Open Journal of Modern Linguistics, 2015
Contact between speakers of clusters of Malay dialects of the Malay Peninsula and Sumatera has be... more Contact between speakers of clusters of Malay dialects of the Malay Peninsula and Sumatera has been going on from historical times until today. This study discusses contacts as reflected in the literary genres of the syair and the hikayat. A research was conducted on a real life situation of the contact of the Bengkulu dialect cluster of Sumatera and that of the southern peninsula Malay dialect in a Bengkulu settler community in the latter region, to assess the receptivity of the speakers of the minority settler community of the norms of the host region. The findings showed that although there was adaptation on the part of the minority community, it did not come readily. Norms that determine the preferred use and usage of language, as well as the social pragmatics of adaptation are the motivating factors for acceptance. Stability of the minority as part of a larger community leads to uninhibited awareness of the traditions of the (former's) parent community, which in turn motivates a regeneration of erstwhile practices.