Ticket #5598 (new)

Opened 4 weeks ago

Please confirm your shipment right now..

Reported by: "Shipment on Hold" <ShipmentonHold@…> Owned by:
Priority: normal Milestone: 2.11
Component: none Version: 3.8.0
Severity: medium Keywords:
Cc: Language:
Patch status: Platform:

Description

Please confirm your shipment right now..

http://fatylitox.biz/ld__c6jsIxnjo88S8D9faaY2rOvRxyfIjVfHBNT6G01glmgKIg

http://fatylitox.biz/5t6KPrTGr2zXk-Cs1sMLIAACTraz35fZ4HfvsT7knl-T4vLIhg

icial and national language of Malaysia is Malaysian, a standardised form of the Malay language. The terminology as per government policy is Bahasa Malaysia ("Malaysian language") but legislation continues to refer to the official language as Bahasa Melayu (literally "Malay language") and both terms remain in use. The National Language Act 1967 specifies the Latin (Rumi) script as the official script of the national language, but does not prohibit the use of the traditional Jawi script.

English remains an active second language, with its use allowed for some official purposes under the National Language Act of 1967. In Sarawak, English is an official state language alongside Malaysian. Historically, English was the de facto administrative language; Malay became predominant after the 1969 race riots (13 May incident). Malaysian English, also known as Malaysian Standard English, is a form of English derived from British English. Malaysian English is widely used in business, along with Manglish, which is a colloquial form of English with heavy Malay, Chinese, and Tamil influences. The government discourages the use of non-standard Malay but has no power to issue compounds or fines to those who use what is perceived as improper Malay on their advertisements.

Many other languages are used in Malaysia, which contains speakers of 137 living languages. Peninsular Malaysia contains speakers of 41 of these languages. The native tribes of East Malaysia have their own languages which are related to, but easily distinguishable from, Malay. Iban is the main tribal language in Sarawak while Dusunic and Kadazan languages are spoken by the natives in Sabah. Chinese Malaysians predominantly speak Chinese dialects from the southern provinces of China. The more common Chinese varieties in the country are Cantonese, Mandarin, Hokkien, Hakka, Hainanese, and Fuzhou. Tamil language is used predominantly by majority of Malaysian Indians. Other South Asian languages are also widely spoken in Malaysia, as well as Thai. A small number of Malaysians have Caucasian ancestry and speak creole languages, such as the Portuguese-based Malaccan Creoles, and the Spanish-based Chava

untitled-part.html Download

Attachments

untitled-part.html Download (5.3 KB) - added by ShipmentonHold@… 4 weeks ago.
Added by email2trac

Change History

Changed 4 weeks ago by ShipmentonHold@…

This message has 1 attachment(s)

Changed 4 weeks ago by ShipmentonHold@…

Added by email2trac

Note: See TracTickets for help on using tickets.