javanese in English

noun
1
a native or inhabitant of Java, or a person of Javanese descent.
In Natrabu restaurants, where a traditional atmosphere is preserved, most of the employees are Javanese , Sundanese or even Acehnese.
2
the Indonesian language of central Java.
A friend from high school even tried to be creative, writing a long message in three languages - Indonesian, Javanese and Sundanese.
adjective
1
relating to Java, its people, or their language.
Gembili in the Javanese language are small, round and black-skinned potatoes.

Use "javanese" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "javanese" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "javanese", or refer to the context using the word "javanese" in the English Dictionary.

1. The population is almost entirely Javanese and over 95% Muslim.

2. The village is 15 kilometres (9 mi) west of Yogyakarta, the cultural heartland of the Javanese.

3. Dharmawangsa ordered the translation of the Mahabharata into Old Javanese in 996.

4. The district consists of 20 villages, and majority are of the Javanese ethnic.

5. The primary motivation was establishing the Javanese-including the Madurese-as masters over the archipelago.

6. This Cocked hat is known in Javanese as mancungan hat, because of its shape like a …

7. Malays, Javanese, Madurese, Amboinese, Bugis, Macassarese, and the rest must all have separate buildings to themselves

8. Nasi pecel is a Javanese rice dish served with pecel (cooked vegetables and peanut sauce).

9. At various times, Cambodia culture also absorbed elements from Javanese, Chinese, Lao, and Thai cultures.

10. In the classical language of Java, Old Javanese, the number of Sanskrit loanwords is far greater.

11. Borneo, just like any country less travelled, isn’t quite as easy to get to as its Javanese neighbours, but it’s definitely worth it

12. Most Balinese speakers also know Indonesian.Balinese itself is not mutually intelligible with Indonesian but may be understood by Javanese speakers after some exposure.

13. Unlike most Indonesians, who practice Islam, the Balinese adhere to Hinduism, though their interpretation of it has been heavily influenced by the neighbouring Javanese culture

14. Brunei was trading with China during the 6th century, and, through allegiance to the Javanese Majapahit kingdom (13th to 15th century), it came under Hindu influence

15. The earliest architectural usage of the Javanese kala demonic masks and makara marine monsters are exhibited along the niches and doorways of the remaining structures.

16. Apart from Javanese city-states, Raden Patah also gained overlordship of the ports of Jambi and Palembang in eastern Sumatra, which produced commodities such as lignaloes and gold.

17. Bali trips become affordable at Alam Puri Art Museum Villa and Spa, an oasis of authentic Javanese and Balinese culture a half hour's drive from Ubud on Bali Island

18. Sense and absence in two centuries of music in Ireland Campursari, a Javanese musical genre that combines gamelan with Western instruments, is described briefly as a passing trend, but Aleatoric gamelan music created

19. ‘Traditional Javanese Islam, a blend of Sufism mixed with Animist and Hindu concepts predating Islam, shares common heritage with Bali.’ ‘Broadly, I'm something of an Animist, so my everyday life is filled with minor recognitions, deals, tributes, and negotiations with local spirits.’

20. ‘The Balinese also have Anantaboga, their own version of the primeval Indian serpent Ananta.’ ‘The Balinese rarely drink large amounts of alcohol and so foreigners were easily the prime consumers.’ ‘Traditionally the Balinese have accepted Javanese rule, and …

21. The Ambiguousness invoked by Anderson in his use of the word "hermaphroditic" is likely a nineteenth-century interpretation rather than a Greek or Roman construction, perhaps suggesting that the fusion of masculine and feminine in Hindu/Javanese mythology is more similar to that of the Greek Hermaphroditus than Anderson implies.

22. "Cockalorums in Search of Cockaigne: Social Interaction, Status Competition, and ritual in a Rural Guyanese Community" University of Arizona: 1983: Associate Professor in Anthropology: Claire Wolfowitz: Suriname "Styles of Speech in Suriname-Javanese" University of Maryland, College Park: 1983: Researcher, Governance Institutions Group: Eugene