| 
Abstracts 
Furrakh AbbasUniversity of Management and Technology, Lahore, Pakistan
 A Study of Articulation of Vowel Sounds to Trace Impact of Malay language on Malaysian Variety of English
 
Karl AnderbeckUniversiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Bangi, Malaysia
 Ibanic dialecology: particle, wave and field
 
Claudia Brugman and Thomas ConnersUniversity of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
 Querying the spoken/written register continuum through Indonesian electronic communications
 
Satwiko Budiono and Dindadari Arum JatiUniversitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia
 The Color Vocabulary Difference of Betawi People in Jakarta and Bekasi: Betawi Identity Documentation
 
Siaw-Fong Chung and Suit Ching SoonNational Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan
 Malay adverb lagi
 
David GilMax Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Jena, Germany
 e
 
David Gil and Eitan GrossmanMax Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Jena, Germany & Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
 Allative-to-Future Grammaticalization in Malayic
 
June JacobArtha Wacana Christian University, Kupang, Indonesia
 The use of superlative in Kupang Malay
 
Angela KlugeSIL, Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia
 Singla handclaps in Papuan Malay — Why some of them avoid stress
 
Yoshimi MiyakeAkita University, Akita, Japan
 Linguistic features of narratives on tragic experiences in Indonesia
 
David MoeljadiNanyang Technological University, Singapore
 Building the Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia (KBBI) Database and Its Online Application
 
David Moeljadi and Hannah ChoiNanyang Technological University, Singapore
 Building a Tokenizer for Indonesian
 
Magdalena NgongoArtha Wacana Christian University, Kupang, Indonesia
 A systemic functional linguistic analysis of clauses relationship in written text of Luke gospel, New Testament using Kupang Malay
 
*Hiroki Nomoto, °Shiro Akasegawa and *Asako Shiohara*Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Tokyo, Japan & °Lago Institute of Language, Shiga Japan
 Reclassifying the Leipzig Corpora Collection for Malay/Indonesian
 
Nor Hashimah Jalaluddin and Zaharani AhmadUniversiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Bangi, Malaysia
 The Kedah Malay Dialects Spoken Among Thai Speakers in Langkawi and Satun:  A Preliminary Study
 
Nur Amirah Binte Khairul Anuar, Hannah Choi and František KratochvílNanyang Technological University, Singapore
 Verb Subcategorization: -kan and -i suffixing verbs in Malay and Indonesian
 
Nur Atiqah Othman and František KratochvílNanyang Technological University, Singapore
 The Malay verbal prefix meN- and its functions
 
Nur Izhihar Ismail and František KratochvílNanyang Technological University, Singapore
 The Intonational Realization of Information Structure in Singapore Malay
 
Kadek Ratih Dwi Oktarini* and Luke Kang Kwong Kapathy°*°Nanyang Technological University, Singapore & *State Polytechnic of Bali, Denpasar, Indonesia
 Category as Person Reference in Flirtatious Indonesian Conversation
 
Rabiah Tul Adawiyah Mohamed Salleh* , Satomi Kawaguchi°, Caroline Jones° & Bruno Di Biase°*°Western Sydney University, Bankstown, Australia & *International Islamic University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
 The development of plural-marking expressions in Malay-English bilingual child
 
Asako Shiohara* and Anthony Jukes°*Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Tokyo, Japan & °University of the South Pacific, Suva, Fiji
 Development of two definite marking strategies in Manado Malay
 
Peter SlomansonUniversity of Tampere, Tampere, Finland
 The development of infinitival complementation in a Malay contact variety
 
Antonia SorienteUniversity of Naples "L'Orientale", Naples, Italy
 The lexicon of 'peace' in Indonesian
 
Atsuko UtsumiMeisei University, Tokyo, Japan
 Voice selection of in Indonesian: the case of the Bali dialect
 
Juliana Wijaya* and Foong Ha Yap°*UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA & °Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
 Evidential Lihat ‘See’ as Stance Marker in Conversational Indonesian: A Socio-interactional Analysis
 
Jane Wong Kon LingUniversiti Malaysia Sabah, Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia
 Markers and Indicators of Sabah Malay
 
Jane Wong Kon Ling and Cheong Shaw MeiUniversiti Malaysia Sabah, Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia
 Language choice and use among Sino-native families in Penampang, Sabah
 
Toshiko YamaguchiUniversity of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
 A cognitive grammar account of kita’s pronominal usage in Malay talk shows
 
Tessa YudithaAtma Jaya University, Jakarta, Indonesia
 Conceptual Metaphors for ‘Kafir’, also known as non-Muslim, in Contemporary Jakartan Political Discourse
 
 |