Malayo-Sumbawan languages
The Malayo-Sumbawan languages are a proposed subgroup of the Austronesian languages that unites the Malayic and Chamic languages with the languages of Java and the western Lesser Sunda Islands, except for Javanese. If valid, it would be the largest demonstrated family of Malayo-Polynesian outside Oceanic. The Malayo-Sumbawan subgroup is however not universally accepted, and is rejected e.g. by Blust and Smith, who supported the Greater North Borneo and Western Indonesian hypotheses. In a 2019 paper published in Oceanic Linguistics, Adelaar accepted both of these groupings, in addition to Smith's redefinition of Barito languages as forming a linkage.
Classification
According to Adelaar, the composition of the family is as follows:- Malayo-Sumbawan
- *Sundanese
- *Madurese
- *Malayo-Chamic–BSS
- **Chamic
- **Malayic
- **Bali–Sasak–Sumbawa
Sundanese appears to share sound changes specifically with Lampung, but Lampung does not fit into Adelaar's Malayo-Sumbawan.