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      Christopher Torchia & Lely Djuhari

      TUTTLE Publishing

       Tokyo Rutland, Vermont Singapore

      Published by Tuttle Publishing, an imprint of Periplus Editions (HK) Ltd.

       www.tuttlepublishing.com

      Copyright © 2011 by Christopher Torchia and Lely Djuhari

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior written permission from the publisher.

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2011921096

      ISBN: 978-1-4629-1057-1 (ebook)

      This title was previously published as Indonesian Idioms and Expressions.

      Distributed by:

      North America, Latin America and Europe

      Tuttle Publishing, 364 Innovation Drive,

       North Clarendon, VT 05759, USA

       Tel: (802) 773 8930; Fax: (802) 773 6993

       [email protected]

       www.tuttlepublishing.com

      Asia Pacific

      Berkeley Books Pte Ltd,

       61 Tai Seng Avenue #02-012, Singapore 534167

       Tel: (65) 6280 1330; Fax: (65) 6280 6290

       [email protected]

       www.periplus.com

      Indonesia

      PT Java Books Indonesia

       Kawasan Industri Pulogadung

       JI. Rawa Gelam IV No. 9, Jakarta 13930

       Tel: (62) 21 4682-1088; Fax: (62) 21 461-0206

       [email protected]

       www.periplus.co.id

      Printed in Singapore

      15 14 13 12 11 6 5 4 3 2 1107TP

      TUTTLE PUBLISHING ® is a registered trademark of Tuttle Publishing, a division of Periplus Editions (HK) Ltd.

      Contents

Introduction 5
Part I: Life Forms 9
1. Creatures 10
2. Characters 27
3. Body Language 45
Part II: Power and Conflict 61
4. Authoritarian Rule 62
5. Money and Politics 79
6. Protest Fever 101
7. A History of Violence 118
Part III: Traditions 145
8. Faith and Fortune 146
9. A Matter of Taste 165
10. Family Affairs 186
11. Wisdom 204
Part IV: Modern Life 213
12. Around Town 214
13. Insults and the Underground 233
14. Hanging Out 251
15. Tech Talk 273
Sources 279
Index 281

      Introduction

      Diam seribu bahasa. Quiet in a thousand languages.

      A rough translation might be: The silence is deafening. It evokes barely repressed anger, or the haughty indifference of a beauty with many suitors.

      Nongkrong. This is a casual phrase, a reference to the Indonesian custom of hanging out, sometimes by squatting on the roadside.

      Mengadu nasib. Tempt fate. Countless Indonesians do this, converging on Jakarta in hopes of finding something better in life. Some succeed, many don’t.

      These and other expressions offer one of the best windows onto the Indonesian culture. Slang, titles, proverbs, nicknames, acronyms, quotations and other expressions reveal its character, in the words of its people. This book of expressions looks at Indonesia with the help of its national language, bahasa Indonesia. It describes Indonesians and their fears, beliefs, history and politics, as well as how they live, fight, grieve and laugh.

      Indonesian is a variant of Malay, the national language of Malaysia, and many of its expressions come from the Malay heartland of Sumatra island. Indonesian has also incorporated terms from Javanese, the language of the dominant ethnic group in a huge nation of more than 17,000 islands, most of them uninhabited. Hundreds more ethnic groups with their own languages are scattered across the archipelago, and many Indonesians speak bahasa Indonesia as a second language, or mix fragments of it into the local tongue. Still, schools in far-flung regions teach Indonesian, and its role as the language of government and the national media make it a unifying