Javindo , also known by the pejorative name Krontjong , is a Dutch-based creole language spoken on Java , Indonesia , such as Semarang . The name Javindo is a portmanteau of Java and Indo , the Dutch word for a person of mixed Indonesian and Dutch descent. This contact language developed from communication between Javanese -speaking mothers and Dutch -speaking fathers in Indo families. Its main speakers were Indo-Eurasian people. Its grammar was based on Javanese, and its vocabulary was based on the Dutch lexicon but pronounced in a Javanese manner. It shows simplification of morphological verb system from Javanese grammar such as merging verb class, disappearance of verbal subcategories.
44-592: PT Djarum (from Javindo ꦗꦫꦸꦩ꧀ 'djarum'; Javanese pronunciation: [ˈdʒarʊm] ) is an Indonesian kretek (clove cigarette) manufacturer and conglomerate based in Kudus , Central Java . It produces dozens of domestic and international brands. Djarum Black , Super, and L.A. Lights are among the most popular products of Djarum. Under its direct parent, PT Dwimuria Investama Andalan (also known as Djarum Group ), it has non-cigarette business lines in technology, banking, and food. The company owns
88-627: A consonant, after ⟨f, ch⟩ and word finally). - ⟨eon, ion, yon⟩ - in French loanwords are written with a single ⟨n⟩ ( mayonaise ) except when a schwa follows ( stationnement ). Vowel length is always indicated but in different ways by using an intricate system of single and double letters. Old Dutch possessed phonemic consonant length in addition to phonemic vowel length, with no correspondence between them. Thus, long vowels could appear in closed syllables, and short vowels could occur in open syllables. In
132-676: A consortium that bought Bank Central Asia (BCA) from BPPN . BCA is the largest private bank in Indonesia and was formerly a part of the Salim Group . Presently, the majority stake of the bank (51%) is controlled by Djarum. In 2004, Djarum acquired a 30-year BOT contract from the government to develop and renovate Hotel Indonesia in Jakarta under the Grand Indonesia superblock project. The Djarum badminton club, PB Djarum ,
176-496: A double vowel, followed by a double consonant, to distinguish those forms from the present tense. Compounds should be read as if each word were spelled separately, and they may therefore appear to violate the normal rules. That may sometimes cause confusion if the word is not known to be a compound. Final devoicing is not indicated in Dutch spelling; words are usually spelled according to the historically original consonant. Therefore,
220-442: A hyphen, for example auto-ongeluk (car accident). The grave accent is used in some French loanwords and native onomatopoeic words, generally when pronunciation would be wrong without it, such as après-ski , barrière (barrier), bèta, caissière (female cashier), carrière (career) and hè? ("What?"), blèren (to yell). Officially, appel is always written without an accent, but sometimes an accent
264-408: A word may be written with a letter for a voiced consonant at the end of a word but still be pronounced with a voiceless consonant: Weak verbs form their past tense and past participle by addition of a dental, ⟨d⟩ or ⟨t⟩ depending on the voicing of the preceding consonant(s) (see Assimilation (linguistics) ). However, because final consonants are always devoiced, there
308-475: A word. Later in Middle Dutch, the distinction between short and long consonants started to disappear. That made it possible for short vowels to appear in open syllables once again. Because there was no longer a phonetic distinction between single and double consonants (they were both pronounced short now), Dutch writers started to use double consonants to indicate that the preceding vowel was short even when
352-460: Is also informally written kado , but this spelling is not recognized by the standard spelling dictionary ). ⟨c, qu, x, y⟩ are sometimes adapted to ⟨k, kw, ks, i⟩ , but ⟨c, x, y⟩ (and rarely ⟨qu⟩ ) are usually retained. Greek letters ⟨φ, ῥ⟩ become ⟨f, r⟩ , not ⟨ph, rh⟩ , but ⟨θ⟩ usually becomes ⟨th⟩ (except before
396-411: Is no difference in pronunciation between these in the participle. Nonetheless, in accordance with the above rules, the orthography operates as if the consonant were still voiced. The same dental consonant letter is spelled in the past participle as in the past tense forms in which it is not word-final. To help memorise when to write ⟨d⟩ and when ⟨t⟩ , Dutch students are taught
440-443: Is no normal way to indicate them in the spelling. When a vowel is short/lax but is free in pronunciation, the spelling is made checked by doubling the following consonant, so that the vowel is kept short according to the default rules. That has no effect on pronunciation, as modern Dutch does not have long consonants: When a vowel is long/tense but still checked in pronunciation, it is necessarily checked in spelling as well. A change
484-412: Is reflected in the spelling: However, ⟨f⟩ and ⟨s⟩ are also written at the end of a syllable that is not final. The pronunciation remains voiced even if the spelling shows a voiceless consonant. This is most common in the past tense forms of weak verbs: Compare this to verbs in which the final consonant is underlyingly voiceless. Here, the dental assimilation rule calls for
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#1732788031909528-818: Is regulated by the Spelling Act of 15 September 2005. This came into force on 22 February 2006, replacing the Act on the Spelling of the Dutch Language of 14 February 1947. The Spelling Act gives the Committee of Ministers of the Dutch Language Union the authority to determine the spelling of Dutch by ministerial decision. In addition, the law requires that this spelling be followed "at the governmental bodies, at educational institutions funded from
572-520: Is the non-actor-oriented verb morphology. This pidgin and creole language -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Dutch orthography Dutch orthography uses the Latin alphabet . The spelling system is issued by government decree and is compulsory for all government documentation and educational establishments. In the Netherlands , the official spelling
616-408: Is thus needed to indicate the length, which is done by doubling the vowel. Doubled ⟨i⟩ does not occur. A single ⟨e⟩ indicates short and long e but is also used to indicate the neutral schwa sound /ə/ in unstressed syllables. Because the schwa is always short, ⟨e⟩ is never followed by a double consonant when it represents /ə/ . A word-final long /eː/
660-423: Is used to distinguish between appel ("apple") and appèl ("appeal", "roll call", and others). Besides being used to mark stress, acute accents are also used in many loanwords (mainly from French) such as logé (overnight guest), coupé (train compartment), oké (okay) and café . The name of the Dutch town Enschede , pronounced [ˈɛnsxəˌde] was once upon a time written Enschedé, but later
704-482: Is written ⟨ee⟩ (or ⟨é⟩ in some loanwords), as an exception to the normal rules. That means that a word-final single ⟨e⟩ will almost always represent a schwa. Because the position of the stress in a polysyllabic word is not indicated in the spelling , that can lead to ambiguity . Some pairs of words are spelled identically, but ⟨e⟩ represents either stressed /ɛ/ or /eː/ or unstressed /ə/ , depending on how
748-463: Is written as more than two letters, the accent is put on the first two vowel letters – except when the first letter is a capital one. According to the Taalunie , accents on capital letters are used only in all caps and in loanwords. So, it is correct to write één, Eén , and ÉÉN , but not to write * Één . The Genootschap Onze Taal states that accents can be put on capital letters whenever
792-575: The PB Djarum , a professional badminton club, the Italian football club Como , and was the main sponsor of Liga 1 , Indonesia's top football league from 2005 to 2011. In 1951, Oei Wie Gwan , an Indonesian businessman who immigrated from China in 1920, acquired NV Murup, a nearly defunct cigarette company in Kudus , Central Java . NV Murup's most popular brand of cigarretes was called Djarum Gramofon (English: gramophone needle ); Gwan shortened
836-415: The diaeresis (trema) to disambiguate diphthongs/triphthongs. Occasionally, other diacritics are used in loanwords and native onomatopoeic words. Accents are not necessarily placed on capital letters (for example, the word Eén at the beginning of a sentence) unless the whole word is written in capitals. Acute accents may be used to emphasise a word in a phrase, on the vowel in the stressed syllable. If
880-923: The digraph ⟨ij⟩ behaves as a single letter. ⟨e⟩ is the most frequently used letter in the Dutch alphabet, as it is in English . The least frequently used letters are ⟨q⟩ and ⟨x⟩ , similar to English. Dutch uses the following letters and letter combinations. For simplicity, dialectal variation and subphonemic distinctions are not always indicated. See Dutch phonology for more information. The following list shows letters and combinations, along with their pronunciations, found in modern native or nativised vocabulary: The following additional letters and pronunciations appear in non-native vocabulary or words using older, obsolete spellings (often conserved in proper names): Loanwords often keep their original spellings: cadeau /kaːˈdoː/ 'gift' (from French) (this word
924-489: The Netherlands. As in English, an apostrophe is used to mark omission of a part of word or several words: Contrary to the city of Den Haag, 's-Hertogenbosch (also known colloquially as ( Den Bosch ) has decided to retain the more formal orthography of its name for common communication like road signing. Except in all caps , the letter immediately following a word-initial apostrophe is not capitalised. If necessary,
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#1732788031909968-490: The acute accent fell off without changing the pronunciation, which has not become *[ɛnˈsxedə] . Similarly, a circumflex accent is also used in some French loanwords, including enquête (survey), and fêteren (to treat). For gênant (embarrassing) it is indecisive, the official spelling has the accent, but the Genootschap Onze also allows the spelling without the accent since it makes no difference to
1012-582: The ban, Djarum's clove products are now marketed as "filtered cigars" and are wrapped in tobacco leaf instead of black paper. The tobacco is air-cured, and they are packaged in boxes of 12 instead of 20. Javindo language It should not be confused with Petjo , a different Dutch- and Malay-based creole also spoken by Indo-Eurasians. With the loss of the generation that lived in the Dutch East Indies era, that language has almost died out, but it become identity for Indo descent. In contrast,
1056-447: The colonial society saw the creole languages as a corrupted Dutch which should be corrected as quickly as possible. Javindo is written using Latin script , specifically Dutch orthography . Even though most of the lexicon is derived from Dutch, the grammar of the language is mostly of Javanese origin, including elements such as morphology; lack of verbs; no past tense; no finite verb . The inherited feature of Javindo from Javanese
1100-399: The consonant had not been long in the past. That eventually led to the modern Dutch spelling system. Modern Dutch spelling still retains many of the details of the late Middle Dutch system. The distinction between checked and free vowels is important in Dutch spelling. A checked vowel is one that is followed by a consonant in the same syllable (the syllable is closed) while a free vowel ends
1144-417: The ending -te , which gives away the voicelessness of the previous sound even if the spelling of that sound itself does not: Some modern loanwords and new coinages do not follow these rules. However, these words tend to not follow the other spelling rules as well: buzzen ("to page (call on a pager)") → buzz ("(I) page"), buzzde ("(I) paged"). Dutch uses the acute accent to mark stress and
1188-403: The examples below. A diaeresis is used to mark a hiatus , if the combination of vowel letters may be either mistaken for a digraph or interpreted in more than one way: geïnd (collected), geüpload (uploaded), egoïstisch (egoistic), sympathieën (sympathies, preferences), coördinaat (coordinate), reëel (realistic), zeeën (seas), met z'n tweeën (two together;
1232-500: The name to Djarum (needle). The company nearly collapsed in 1963 when its factory was destroyed in a fire around the time of Oei's death. Oei's sons Budi and Bambang Hartono took over the company and began the process of rebuilding it. The company began producing machine-rolled kretek in the late 1970s, but it also continues to produce hand-rolled kretek made by manual labourers. In 2016, Djarum and several other tobacco companies in Indonesia were implicated by Human Rights Watch for
1276-552: The need arises, but makes an exception for Eén . Stress on a short vowel, written with only one letter, is occasionally marked with a grave accent : Kàn jij dat? (equivalent to the example below), wèl . However, it is technically incorrect to do so. Additionally, the acute accent may also be used to mark different meanings of various words, including een/één ( a(n) / one ), voor/vóór (for/before), vóórkomen/voorkómen (to occur/to prevent), and vérstrekkend/verstrékkend (far-reaching/issuing), as shown in
1320-465: The pronunciation. The circumflex accent is also used the West Frisian language and so in general Dutch as well if there is no translation. Skûtsjesilen is the most common example, where silen is West Frisian for zeilen (to sail) and a skûtsje is a specific type of sailboat. Fryslân , the official (and Frisian) name of the province Friesland , is also well known, at least in
1364-584: The public purse, as well as at the exams for which legal requirements have been established". In other cases, it is recommended, but it is not mandatory to follow the official spelling. The Decree on the Spelling Regulations of 2005–2006 contains the annexed spelling rules decided by the Committee of Ministers on 25 April 2005. This decree entered into force on 1 August 2006, replacing the Spelling Decree of 19 June 1996. In Flanders ,
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1408-568: The rule " 't kofschip is met thee beladen " ("the merchant ship is loaded with tea"). If the verb stem in the infinitive ends with one of the consonants of "'t kofschip" ( ⟨ -t, -k, -f, -s, -ch, -p ⟩ ), the past tense dental is a - ⟨t⟩ -; otherwise, it is a - ⟨d⟩ -. However, the rule also applies to loanwords ending in - ⟨c⟩ , - ⟨q⟩ or - ⟨x⟩ , as these are also voiceless. ⟨v⟩ and ⟨z⟩ are somewhat special: Then, therefore, final devoicing
1452-806: The same spelling rules are currently applied by the Decree of the Flemish Government Establishing the Rules of the Official Spelling and Grammar of the Dutch language of 30 June 2006. The modern Dutch alphabet, used for the Dutch language , consists of the 26 letters of the ISO basic Latin alphabet . Depending on how ⟨y⟩ is used, six (or five) letters are vowels and 20 (or 21) letters are consonants . In some aspects,
1496-680: The same three-letter sequence in different situations, with hyphens indicating the syllable divisions in the written form, and the IPA period to indicate them in the spoken form: Free ⟨i⟩ is fairly rare and is mostly confined to loanwords and names. As tense /y/ is rare except before /r/ , free ⟨u⟩ is likewise rare except before ⟨r⟩ . The same rule applies to word-final vowels, which are always long because they are not followed by any consonant (but see below on ⟨e⟩ ). Short vowels, not followed by any consonant, do not normally exist in Dutch, and there
1540-401: The singular and plural of a noun or between the infinitive and the conjugated forms of verbs. Examples of alternations are shown below. Note that free /i/ is spelled ⟨ie⟩ in native words: There are some irregular nouns that change their vowel from short/lax in the singular to long/tense in the plural. Their spelling does not alternate between single and double letters. However,
1584-460: The sound /ɪ/ becomes /eː/ in the plural in such nouns, not /iː/ That is reflected in the spelling. As a rule, the simplest representation is always chosen. A double vowel is never written in an open syllable, and a double consonant is never written at the end of a word or when next to another consonant. A double vowel is rarely followed by a double consonant, as it could be simplified by writing them both single. The past tense of verbs may have
1628-526: The stress is placed. The length of a vowel generally does not change in the pronunciation of different forms of a word. However, in different forms of a word, a syllable may alternate between checked and free depending on the syllable that follows. The spelling rules nonetheless follow the simplest representation, writing double letters only when necessary. Consequently, some forms of the same word may be written with single letters while others are written with double letters. Such alternations commonly occur between
1672-410: The syllable (the syllable is open). This distinction can apply to pronunciation or spelling independently, but a syllable that is checked in pronunciation will always be checked in spelling as well (except in some unassimilated loanwords). A single vowel that is checked in neither is always long/tense. A vowel that is checked in both is always short/lax. The following table shows the pronunciation of
1716-420: The transition to early Middle Dutch , short vowels were lengthened when they stood in open syllables. Short vowels could now occur only in closed syllables. Consonants could still be long in pronunciation and acted to close the preceding syllable. Therefore, any short vowel that was followed by a long consonant remained short. The spelling system used by early Middle Dutch scribes accounted for that by indicating
1760-466: The two of them) and even until 1996 zeeëend (sea duck; now spelled zee-eend ). On a line break that separates the vowels but keeps parts of a digraph together, the diaeresis becomes redundant and so is not written: ego-/istisch, sympathie-/en, re-/eel, zee-/en, met z'n twee-/en. The rule can be extended to names, such as Michaëlla , e.g. Michaëlla Krajicek . The diaeresis is only used in derivational suffixes since 1996; compounds are written with
1804-462: The use of child labor without hand protection. Through its expansion into various other non-cigarette sectors, including food, drink, banking, garments, and technology, in the 1980s and 1990s Djarum became one of the top five largest conglomerates within Indonesia. By 2010, Djarum Group was the largest conglomerate in Indoneisa. After the 1997 Asian financial crisis , the company became a part of
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1848-406: The vowel is written as a digraph, an acute accent is put on both parts of the digraph. Although that rule includes ⟨ ij ⟩ , the acute accent on the ⟨j⟩ is frequently omitted in typing (resulting in ⟨íj⟩ instead of ⟨íj́⟩ ), as putting an acute accent on a ⟨j⟩ is still problematic in most word processing software. If the vowel
1892-409: The vowel length only when it was necessary (sometimes by doubling the vowel but also in other ways). As the length was implicit in open syllables, it was not indicated there, and only a single vowel was written. Long consonants were indicated usually by doubling the consonant letter, which meant that a short vowel was always followed by at least two consonant letters or by just one consonant at the end of
1936-595: Was founded in 1974 by Budi Hartono . Its players, such as Liem Swie King and Alan Budikusuma , have won numerous championships for Indonesia. Djarum's kreteks enjoyed a high level of popularity among smokers in the United States during the clove cigarette fad of the 1980s. Since 2009, most flavoured cigarettes in the United States have been banned following the passing of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act . To circumvent
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