LANGUAGE USE OF THE IBAN PEOPLE IN IBAN DOMINANT AND NON-IBAN DOMINANT AREAS IN SARAWAK

The study examined the language use of the Iban people in Iban dominant and non-Iban dominant areas in Sarawak. Questionnaire data were obtained from 84 Iban respondents on their language use in nine domains. The findings showed that regardless of the numerical dominance of Iban in the area, a...

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Main Authors: Lily, METOM, Ting, Su Hie, Ling, Hsin-Nie
Format: Proceeding
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/36786/1/iban67.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/36786/
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Institution: Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
Language: English
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spelling my.unimas.ir.367862021-11-25T02:32:52Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/36786/ LANGUAGE USE OF THE IBAN PEOPLE IN IBAN DOMINANT AND NON-IBAN DOMINANT AREAS IN SARAWAK Lily, METOM Ting, Su Hie Ling, Hsin-Nie P Philology. Linguistics The study examined the language use of the Iban people in Iban dominant and non-Iban dominant areas in Sarawak. Questionnaire data were obtained from 84 Iban respondents on their language use in nine domains. The findings showed that regardless of the numerical dominance of Iban in the area, almost all the Iban respondents spoke Iban with their family, but they mostly used Sarawak Malay Dialect in public places and the market. In Iban dominant areas, Iban is the main language of communication with neighbours, friends, classmates, and for prayers, while Sarawak Malay Dialect is mostly used with workmates. However, in the non-Iban dominant areas, Iban is mostly used only with neighbours but English is used mostly with classmates, workmates, and for prayers. The participants also used Sarawak Malay Dialect when interacting with their friends. As for social media communication, respondents from both Iban dominant and non-Iban dominant areas used mainly English. The exception is on writing SMS messages, where respondents from Iban dominant areas used mostly Iban. The study showed that in non-Iban dominant areas, the ethnic language is losing ground in communication with friends and classmates, and for praying, indicating that these are the domains that will see potential shift in future 2021 Proceeding PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/36786/1/iban67.pdf Lily, METOM and Ting, Su Hie and Ling, Hsin-Nie (2021) LANGUAGE USE OF THE IBAN PEOPLE IN IBAN DOMINANT AND NON-IBAN DOMINANT AREAS IN SARAWAK. In: International Conference on Language Studies iCLS2021, 8-9 Sept 2021, UNIMAS.
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
building Centre for Academic Information Services (CAIS)
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
content_source UNIMAS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.unimas.my/
language English
topic P Philology. Linguistics
spellingShingle P Philology. Linguistics
Lily, METOM
Ting, Su Hie
Ling, Hsin-Nie
LANGUAGE USE OF THE IBAN PEOPLE IN IBAN DOMINANT AND NON-IBAN DOMINANT AREAS IN SARAWAK
description The study examined the language use of the Iban people in Iban dominant and non-Iban dominant areas in Sarawak. Questionnaire data were obtained from 84 Iban respondents on their language use in nine domains. The findings showed that regardless of the numerical dominance of Iban in the area, almost all the Iban respondents spoke Iban with their family, but they mostly used Sarawak Malay Dialect in public places and the market. In Iban dominant areas, Iban is the main language of communication with neighbours, friends, classmates, and for prayers, while Sarawak Malay Dialect is mostly used with workmates. However, in the non-Iban dominant areas, Iban is mostly used only with neighbours but English is used mostly with classmates, workmates, and for prayers. The participants also used Sarawak Malay Dialect when interacting with their friends. As for social media communication, respondents from both Iban dominant and non-Iban dominant areas used mainly English. The exception is on writing SMS messages, where respondents from Iban dominant areas used mostly Iban. The study showed that in non-Iban dominant areas, the ethnic language is losing ground in communication with friends and classmates, and for praying, indicating that these are the domains that will see potential shift in future
format Proceeding
author Lily, METOM
Ting, Su Hie
Ling, Hsin-Nie
author_facet Lily, METOM
Ting, Su Hie
Ling, Hsin-Nie
author_sort Lily, METOM
title LANGUAGE USE OF THE IBAN PEOPLE IN IBAN DOMINANT AND NON-IBAN DOMINANT AREAS IN SARAWAK
title_short LANGUAGE USE OF THE IBAN PEOPLE IN IBAN DOMINANT AND NON-IBAN DOMINANT AREAS IN SARAWAK
title_full LANGUAGE USE OF THE IBAN PEOPLE IN IBAN DOMINANT AND NON-IBAN DOMINANT AREAS IN SARAWAK
title_fullStr LANGUAGE USE OF THE IBAN PEOPLE IN IBAN DOMINANT AND NON-IBAN DOMINANT AREAS IN SARAWAK
title_full_unstemmed LANGUAGE USE OF THE IBAN PEOPLE IN IBAN DOMINANT AND NON-IBAN DOMINANT AREAS IN SARAWAK
title_sort language use of the iban people in iban dominant and non-iban dominant areas in sarawak
publishDate 2021
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/36786/1/iban67.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/36786/
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