mad ISO 639

Basa Mathura Autonyms

Madura

  • Geography

    ID East Java province: Java island coast south and west of Surabaja city, Bawean, Kangean, and Sapudi islands; South Kalimantan province: Java Sea area.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Indonesia

mad
Madhura, Madurese
Basa Mathura
7,790,000 in Indonesia (2015 UNSD), decreasing. Ethnic population: 7,180,000 (2011 census). Total users in all countries: 7,790,900.
East Java province: Java island coast south and west of Surabaja city, Bawean, Kangean, and Sapudi islands; South Kalimantan province: Java Sea area.
Indonesia, Java and Bali
5 (Developing).
Austronesian, Malayo-Polynesian, Madurese
Bawean (Babean, Bhebien, Boyanese), Bangkalan (Bangkalon), Pamekesan (Pamekasan), Sampang, Sapudi, Sumenep. Dialect continuum. Reports differ about inherent intelligibility among dialects: some Sumenep and Sampang report they cannot understand Pamekasan or Sumenep. Difficult intelligibility with Kangean [kkv]. Bawean may be a separate language. Lexical similarity: 75% with Kangean [kkv].
SVO; nontonal; partial reduplication.
Vigorous on Madura Island and East Java. All domains. Used by all. Also use Indonesian [ind]. Also use Javanese [jav].
Literacy rate in L2: 40%. Literacy higher among Bangkalon. Taught as subject in primary schools. Literature. Newspapers. Radio. Videos. Dictionary. Grammar. Texts. Bible: 1994.
Latin script [Latn].
Mainly rural. Bawean consider their language separate from Madurese. East Madurese, especially Sumenep, is considered high, or standard Madurese. Sumenep is isolated culturally and geographically. Bangkalon, spoken in Surabaya, is important economically because that city is highly urbanized and is most affected by Bahasa Indonesia. Muslim.
OLAC resources in and about Madura
Madura
900 in Singapore (1985). Ethnic population: 28,000 (2018 J. Leclerc).
Scattered.
Bawean (Boyanese).
7 (Shifting)
Adults only. Shifting to Malay [zlm].
Non-indigenous. Muslim.
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