Learn Indonesian: Top Indonesian Words - Indonesian Demonstrative Pronouns & Demonstrative Features

In this videos session we talk about an overview of all Indonesian Demonstrative features including Indonesian Demonstrative Pronouns in focus, and overview of other Demonstrative words including Demonstrative Adjectives, both for the Indonesian Standard or Bahasa Indonesia Baku but also the Colloquial One or Bahasa Indonesia Sehari-hari.
Indonesian Demonstrative Features are among the words counted as the most Indonesian used words or top Indonesian used words so they are very important Indonesian Basic words if you learn Indonesian. Learn from Indonesian Natives to think like a Indonesian Native Speaker.
Demonstrative Features are words which are use to point things, to point persons, to point places, to point ways or adjectives or verbs but also to point amounts such as quantities or qualities. In case you often use words this, that, these, those, here, there, word so, and others, this would be the chance to have a look the Indonesian version one.
In this videos we would talk about the Indonesian Demonstrative Overview, the Indonesian Basic Structures, the Indonesian Pronunciation, but also The Example How to Use Indonesian Demonstrative Pronouns, and Basic Vocabularies of using Demonstrative Pronouns like asking What is this, What is That, Who is This, Who is That in Indonesian. It also covers the most useful Indonesian sentences to ask How to call specific words in Indonesian.
Please feel free to comments and give feedback since I believe those are the key of the success of this channel growth.
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Many thanks of watching this video.
If you also search for specific contents within this video, this video provides sections or chapters you can easily jump from one chapter to another.
Contents:
00:00 Indonesian Demonstrative Pronouns Overview / Indonesian Demonstrative Features Overview
02:07 Indonesian Demonstrative Pronouns Examples - Asking What
04:28 Indonesian Demonstrative Pronouns Examples - Asking Who
05:29 Indonesian Demonstrative Pronouns Recap - Asking What & Who
07:16 How to ask the Indonesian Words for a Specific Foreign Words
08:21 Indonesian Demonstrative Particles Nih and Tuh
09:12 Questions of the Day
Indonesian Terms related to Indonesian Demonstrative Features:
- Indonesian Demonstrative Pronouns: Kata Ganti Tunjuk Bahasa Indonesia / Kata Ganti Penunjuk Bahasa Indonesia
- Indonesian Demonstrative Articles: Artikel Tunjuk Bahasa Indonesia / Article Penunjuk Bahasa Indonesia / Kata Sandang Penunjuk Bahasa Indonesia
- Indonesian Demonstrative Adjectives: Kata Tunjuk Kata Sifat Bahasa Indonesia
- Indonesian Articles: Artikel Bahasa Indonesia / Kata Sandang Bahasa Indonesia
Lists of Indonesian Demonstrative: ini, itu, sini, situ, sana, begini, begitu, segini, segitu.
#LearnIndonesian #BelajarBahasaIndonesia #IndonesianLanguage #EfeltiLanglover #Langlover #FabianBahasaIndonesia #EfeltiBahasaIndonesia #IndonesianDemonstrativePronouns #DemonstrativePronoun #Linguistics #KataGanti #BahasaIndonesia #Indonesian #AsianLanguage #ForeignLanguage

Пікірлер: 10

  • @larismanisonlinestore
    @larismanisonlinestore Жыл бұрын

    Semoga channelnya cepat berkembang. Memperkenalkan Bahasa Indonesia dikancah Internasional adalah tugas yang mulia. Tetap semangat👍👍👍

  • @chrisadyth9142
    @chrisadyth91422 жыл бұрын

    i really want to learn bahasa Indonesia. your way of teaching is really good. Thak you so much 😊

  • @breakthelogic3436
    @breakthelogic34362 жыл бұрын

    Superb! I just start my Indonesian language journey today.Hopefully,I have a good start.It's very helpful for me to understand colloquial language.Please do more videos about various colloquial aspects present in Bahasa Indonesia. Terima Kasih☺

  • @efelti_langlover

    @efelti_langlover

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the feedback. I'm glad to always add the parallel colloquial features to the topics I'll put, it's in my plan ☺️. Indonesian has a lot of interesting and fun features in their simplicity. I'm wishing you the success and fun in learning Indonesian. I'm preparing my next videos. Stay tuned ☺️.

  • @sallylauper8222
    @sallylauper82227 ай бұрын

    A fun way for me to remember these "demonstrative pronouns" is that there's a TV comedy series called "Apa Ini Apa Itu." It's about a teacher whose students are always cheating and so he always gets mad and starts yelling "Apa ini? Apa Itu?"

  • @ph0d0pus
    @ph0d0pus2 жыл бұрын

    You only gave an example for "tuh": Sakitnya tuh di sini. How about "nih"? Could you also give us an example? Thank you.

  • @efelti_langlover

    @efelti_langlover

    2 жыл бұрын

    "nih" and "tuh" are generally interchangeable. "nih" is used if the context is felt nearby / proximal, and "tuh" if it is not nearby or far away / distal. So instead of "Sakitnya tuh di sini" ("The pain (that one) is there"), "Sakitnya nih di sini" is also correct, means "The pain (this one) is here". But whether it is really near or far, it is relative, based on the speaker's feeling only, it's not always about right or wrong. Some other examples: "Dia sedang sibuk tuh" means "Hey look (/ look at there,) he is busy.", and "Saya sedang sibuk nih" means "Hey look (/ look at here), I am busy." In this context since "I" in general Indonesian feeling is more nearby / proximal than distal so generally is incorrect to say with "tuh" but with "nih".

  • @didi3842
    @didi38422 жыл бұрын

    Is there any tones in indonesian?

  • @efelti_langlover

    @efelti_langlover

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not like Chinese, Vietnamese, or Thai which are categorized to tonal languages, Indonesian is not a tonal language. Similar like in English, syllable tone does not change the word's meaning in Indonesian. Indonesian is even more simple than English in context of tones. In Indonesian it doesn't even differentiate syllable's pitch lengths nor syllable's stresses within a word, not like in English where syllable lengths or stresses within a word may change word meaning (e.g. feet vs fit, eat vs it) However, like in English, there are intonations in Indonesian to convey moods, modalities, and emotions. Highlighting the important of the words, phrases, or segments. It may change the intonation to differentiate whether a sentence is a question, a statement or an imperative.

  • @didi3842

    @didi3842

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@efelti_langlover thanks

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