Col language
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Col | |
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Base Lembak | |
Sindang | |
Native to | Indonesia |
Region | Sumatra |
Native speakers | 150,000 (2000 census)[1] |
Austronesian
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | liw |
Glottolog | coll1240 |
Linguasphere | 33-AFA-dt |
Col (pronounced: [tʃɔl]), or Lembak (also known as Bahase Linggau), is a Malayic language from Sumatra, Indonesia. It is spoken by around 145,000 speakers (2000) with most speakers found in Lubuklinggau Municipality, South Sumatra, and the areas surrounding it, all the way to Musi Rawas in South Sumatra. The speakers of this language belong to the Lembak ethnic group, a small ethnic group closely related to ethnic Malays, especially those of Bengkulu and Palembang Malays. Col is closely related to Palembang Malay and Bengkulu Malay with minor differences mostly in pronunciation. Bengkulu Malay and Palembang Malay tend to end words with "o" while Col usually ends them with "e". The language has its own ISO code, liw.
References
[edit]- ^ Col at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
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 |
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