Loncong language
Austronesian language spoken in Indonesia
Loncong | |
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Orang Laut | |
Sekak | |
Native to | Indonesia |
Region | Bangka and Belitung islands |
Native speakers | 420 (2000)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | lce |
Glottolog | lonc1237 |
The Orang Laut language or Loncong, is one of the Malayic languages. It is one of several native languages of Orang Laut ('Sea People') of the Bangka and Belitung islands in Indonesia, and may be two distinct languages.
Anderbeck considers there to be an Orang Laut genetic grouping of languages, which includes the Kedah, Riau, and Sekak subgroups. The Malayic language Duano is divergent, and does not form part of this group.[2]
References
- ^ Loncong at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
- ^ Anderbeck, Karl. "The Malayic-speaking; Orang Laut Dialects and directions for research". wacana.ui.ac.id.[dead link]
Sources
- Anderbeck, Karl. 2012. The Malayic-speaking; Orang Laut Dialects and directions for research. Wacana, 14(2): 265-312.
- Blench, Roger. 2016. "The linguistic background to Southeast Asian sea nomadism". In Sea nomads of Southeast Asia: past and present. Bérénice Bellina, Roger M. Blench & Jean-Christophe Galipaud eds. Singapore: NUS Press.
- Moseley, Christopher and R. E. Asher, ed. Atlas of the Worlds Languages (New York: Routelage, 1994)
Malayo-Sumbawan |
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Northwest Sumatra– Barrier Islands |
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Lampungic |
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Celebic |
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South Sulawesi | |||||||||||||
Moklenic | |||||||||||||
Javanese | |||||||||||||
Central–Eastern Malayo-Polynesian (over 700 languages) |
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Unclassified |