mui ISO 639

Musi

  • Geography

    ID South Sumatra province: widespread in northern 2 thirds of province from Musi river upstream to Bukit Barisan mountains, downstream to coastal swamplands; Lampung province: northeast; border areas in Jambi and Bengkulu provinces.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Indonesia

mui
Baso Palembang, Palembang, Palembang Malay, Palembangese, Sekayu
3,105,000 in Indonesia (2000 census). Total users in all countries: 3,116,000.
South Sumatra province: widespread in northern 2 thirds of province from Musi river upstream to Bukit Barisan mountains, downstream to coastal swamplands; Lampung province: northeast; border areas in Jambi and Bengkulu provinces.
Indonesia, Sumatra
3 (Wider communication). Became a lingua franca in South Sumatra in the 20th century. Seven people groups use Musi as L1. Used in farming, petroleum refineries, tourism, trade, and music.
Austronesian, Malayo-Polynesian, Malayo-Chamic, Malayic, Malay
Pegagan, Musi Sekayu, Penukal, Kelingi, Palembang Lama, Meranjat, Penesak, Belide, Burai, Lematang Ilir, Coastal Malay, Rawas. A mutually-intelligible dialect chain stretching along the Musi River with 2 subgroups: Musi and Palembang. A member of macrolanguage Malay [msa].
Home, village, market, religion. Used by all. Positive attitudes. Also use English [eng]. Also use Indonesian [ind]. Used as L2 by Central Malay [pse], Col [liw], Javanese [jav], Komering [kge].
Preference is for Indonesian for educational and religious materials. Preference is for L1 for cultural stories and songs. Mixed preference for health and agricultural materials. Taught as subject in some primary schools. Radio. TV. Dictionary. Grammar.
Latin script [Latn].
Muslim.
OLAC resources in and about Musi
Musi
11,000 in Singapore (2018 J. Leclerc).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Singapore