Sumbawa language
Sumbawa or Sumbawan is a Malayo-Polynesian language of the western half of Sumbawa Island, Indonesia, which it shares with speakers of Bima. It is closely related to the languages of adjacent Lombok and Bali; indeed, it is the easternmost Austronesian language in the south of Indonesia that is not part of the Central Malayo-Polynesian Sprachbund. The Sumbawa write their language with their own native script commonly known in their homeland as Satera Jontal and they also use the Latin script.
Phonology
Vowels
can also have allophones of.Language groups and dialects
Linguistically, the Sumbawa language is closely related to the Sasak and Balinese languages. Both languages are part of the Bali-Sasak-Sumbawa language group, which is included in the "Northern and Eastern" group of Malay-Sumbawa languages.In the Sumbawa language, several regional dialects or language variations are known based on the area where they are spread, including the Samawa dialect, Baturotok or Batulanteh, and other dialects used in the Ropang mountain area such as Labangka, Lawen, as well as the population in the south of Lunyuk, besides the Taliwang dialect, Jereweh, and the Tongo dialect. Within these regional dialects, there are still a number of regional dialect variations used by certain communities, which indicate that the Sumbawa tribe consists of various ethnic ancestors, for example, the Taliwang dialect spoken by speakers in Labuhan Lalar who are descendants of the Bajau ethnic group is different from the Taliwang dialect spoken by the community in Sampir Village who are descendants of the Mandar, Bugis, and Makassar.
Social interaction
As the dominant language used by social groups in Sumbawa, Samawa is not only accepted as a unifying language among the ethnic groups of the former Sumbawa Sultanate but also serves as a medium for facilitating regional culture, supported by the majority of its speakers and used as the everyday language of the political, social, and economic elite. As a result, the Samawa language developed by getting loan words from the ethnic languages of its speakers, namely the Javanese, Madurese, Balinese, Sasak, Bima, Sulawesi, Sumatra, Kalimantan, China and Arabic. Even during the colonial period, the Samawa language also absorbed foreign vocabulary originating from Portuguese, Dutch, and Japanese. Samawa language has now been accepted as a language that shows a relatively high level of stability in the discussion of regional languages.
Relatedness
| English | Banjar language | Sumbawa Language |
| Raft | Lanting | Lanting |
| Near | Parak | Parak |
| Name of a type of food | Pundut | Pundut |
| English | Balinese language | Sumbawa Language |
| Title of King | Dewa Agung | Dewa Masmawa |
| When | Pidan | Pidan |
| English | Makassar language | Sumbawa language |
| The title of the King's son | Daeng | Daeng |
| English | Arabic Morocco | Sumbawa language |
| Maulana | Mawla/Moulay | Mele |
| Noblewoman | Lalla | La la |