Kristang language

 Papia Kristang or  Kristang is a creole language spoken by the Kristang, a community of people of mixed Portuguese and indigenous Malay ancestry, chiefly in Malaysia (Malacca), Singapore and Perth, Australia.

In Malacca, the language is also called  Cristão,  Portugues di Melaka ("Malacca Portuguese"),  Linggu Mai ("Mother Tongue") or simply  Papia ("speak"). In Singapore, it is generally known as Kristang, where it is undergoing sustained revitalisation.

In Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger (2010; formerly the Red Book of Endangered Languages) published by UNESCO, Kristang is classified as a "severely endangered" language, with only about 2,000 speakers. Up to 2014, linguists concerned with Kristang have generally accepted a combined speaker population of about 1,000 individuals or less. The language has about 750 speakers in Malacca, around 100 in Singapore, and a community of unknown but comparative or larger size in Perth due to sustained emigration from Malaysia and Singapore after both countries gained their independence from the United Kingdom. A small number of speakers also live in other Portuguese Eurasian communities in Kuala Lumpur and Penang in Malaysia, and in other diaspora communities in Canada, the United Kingdom, and elsewhere.

Etymology
Its original endonym Papia Kristang is taken from Portuguese papear cristão ("to chat Christian"). An alternate etymology supporting the differentiation of the Kristang ethnicity and language from the Christian religion as part of revitalisation efforts in Singapore was also proposed in 2022, namely a portmanteau of Greek χρυσός (chrysos, meaning gold) and Dutch steen (stone). The papia element of the Papia Kristang is further cognate with Papiamento, another Portuguese-based creole spoken in the Dutch West Indies.

Origins
The Kristang language originated after the conquest of Malacca (Malaysia) in 1511 by the Portuguese Empire. Until a takeover by the Dutch in 1642, Malacca served as one of the key ports in the trade and administration network of Portuguese establishments along with Goa and Hormuz, allowing Portugal control over main Asiatic trade routes. The lingua franca of Malacca then was a pidginised form of Malay known as Bazaar Malay or Melayu Pasar, used amongst the resident foreign population which then consisted mainly of Javanese, Tamils and Hokkien Chinese. The constant traffic of Portuguese and traders of other origins such as India eventually gave birth to Papia Kristang, one of many Portuguese-derived contact languages which resulted from Portuguese colonial expansion during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. A pidgin Portuguese preceding the Kristang creole has also been proposed, whereby a reduced system based on Portuguese converges with other languages present in the contact situation.

The community of Kristang speakers descends mainly from interracial relationships between Portuguese men and local women, as well as a number of migrants from Portuguese India, themselves of mixed Indo-Portuguese ancestry. This was supported by Portuguese officials who advocated mixed marriages in the face of a labour shortage in the colonies, leading to the very first native speakers of Kristang as well as the development of the creole.

Even after Portugal lost Malacca and almost all contact in 1641, the Kristang community largely preserved its language. The demographics of Malacca in the mid-17th century was still predominantly made up of the Portuguese even under Dutch control. The Irmang di Greza (Brothers of the Church), a manifestation of the bond between language and religion in the Kristang culture, acted as an intermediary between the priest and the remnants of the Portuguese population despite prohibition by the Dutch. Liturgy and pastoral sessions were conducted in Kristang in Malacca, which contributed to the longevity of the language into a period as late as the 20th century.

Kristang also had a substantial influence on Macanese, the creole language spoken in Macau, due to substantial migration from Malacca after its conquest by the Dutch.

Attrition of Kristang
The ceding of Malacca by the Dutch to the British via the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824 directly caused the decline of the Kristang language. By the mid 19th century, many Kristangs flocked towards clerical and auxiliary positions provided by their new colonial masters. As such, the Kristang language saw a decline in use compared to English. In addition, the rising affluence of the region meant more job opportunities, resulting in many Kristangs moving away from Malacca. Moreover, the language is not taught at school, although there are still some Church services in Kristang.

In the context of Singapore, Kristang arrived in the 1820s due to the large influx of Eurasian immigrants from Malacca. This resulted in a Kristang-speaking community large enough for the variety of the language spoken in Singapore to be acknowledged as a distinct variety of Creole Portuguese. However, there was little exposure and recognition of Kristang in Singapore, especially when English became entrenched as the sole language of education and the major language used in most spheres of society after the country gained independence in 1965. As a result, the intergenerational transmission of Kristang ceased almost completely.

The upkeep of Kristang can largely be attributed to its connection with the dominant religion of the Portuguese and their relative social standing in their communities between the 1600s to the late 1800s. The core Kristang-speaking communities gradually eroded due to better socioeconomic opportunities elsewhere. Post-World War Two, the new generation of Catholic priests that arrived to replace the pre-war priests who had been executed demonstrated little sensitivity towards the Kristang language and culture. Eventually, the bond between Kristang and religion was severed due to the association of the Portuguese Mission with the St Xavier's Church.

Migration overseas and intermarriage with other nationalities have also led to Kristang speakers leaving the Portuguese Settlement in order to live and work in other parts of Malaysia. Furthermore, the dominantly Kristang-speaking middle-class gradually began to speak English for practical reasons, altering the prestige of English with regards to Kristang. To many in the community, they grew to accept that speaking English was a key to employment instead of Kristang, facilitating a breakdown in the transmission of Kristang.

Revitalisation efforts
Papia Kristang is facing a steep decline in language use within the community. There has been an apparent language shift to English and Bahasa Malaysia due to the reduced prestige and accessibility of Kristang. However, revitalization efforts have begun in recent years in both the Portuguese Settlement in Singapore and Malacca. Such efforts have seen some success, nearly tripling the number of Kristang speakers of varying fluency.

Singapore
The revitalisation of Papia Kristang in Singapore can be largely attributed to the Kodrah Kristang ('Awaken, Kristang') initiative led by Kevin Martens Wong, the Kabesa or leader of the community. This long-term revitalisation initiative seeks to revitalize the language by teaching it to a new generation of learners through complementary classes and the provision of online materials. Kodrah Kristang initially began with a small group of 14 people, eventually developing into a thorough Kristang revitalisation plan known as the Kaminyu di Kodramintu (Path of Awakening). The goals of the plan are twofold. Firstly, it sought to create a sizable pool of 50-100 new adults speakers who have acquired Kristang as a secondary language, speaking it alongside 75-100 elderly speakers. The subsequent focus will then be placed on intergenerational transmission. These estimates were made based on comparisons with other revitalized languages such as Hawaiian. In 2017, they also held the first Kristang Language Festival which was attended by more than 1,400 people, including the Portuguese-Eurasian community in Singapore and Singapore's Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean. The project includes an audio course on Soundcloud, known as Kontah Kristang and a vocabulary course on Memrise, known as Kriseh Kristang. The success of the Memrise project has "inspired the  start  of  similar  projects  among  speakers  of  other  Indigenous  languages," like Unangam Qilinĝingin to teach the Aleut language spoken in Alaska.

A Kristang Online Dictionary was also launched at the Kristang Language Festival. The project, Pinchah Kristang: A Dictionary of Kristang, is led and developed by Luís Morgado da Costa based on the WordNet system developed at Nanyang Technological University. This dictionary also supports another initiative known as the Jardinggu, or Kristang Lexical Incubator based on a new word formation process called sunyeskah or dreamfishing. Initiated in April 2017, the Jardinggu provided a space for the discussion and accelerated addition of new words into the Kristang lexicon. Through this initiative, around 320 new lexemes for concepts that were previously represented by English loans have been suggested by the Kodrah community.

Malacca
The Kristang-speaking community located at the Portuguese Settlement, or Padri sa Chang (“The Priest’s Land”) was able to undertake more sustained revitalisation efforts and publicise itself to non-Eurasian Malaysians, and the language. Notably with texts, stories and phrasebooks in Kristang produced by Joan Margaret Marbeck and through investments and interest from individuals and organisations outside the community. Joan Marbeck has produced three publications: Ungu Adanza (An Inheritance), Linggu Mai (Mother Tongue) and the Kristang Phrasebook. She is also credited with writing probably the only play in Kristang, called Seng Marianne (Without Marianne) and was also instrumental in staging a musical in Kristang - Kazamintu no Praiya which translates to 'Wedding on the beach'.

Within the community, there were efforts made together with the help of academics to promote their culture and the Kristang language. In 1988, Alan Baxter published A grammar of Kristang based on his fieldwork within the community. This was the first book which focused on the descriptive grammar of Kristang and established many core concept on Kristang linguistics. It also had a significant impact on many later studies on Kristang.

Support was also received from the Lisbon-based Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, which funded and published Marbeck's Kristang texts, as well as the University of Malaya and linguists like Dr. Stefanie Pillai, who have produced a CD of Kristang hymns, and in plans of developing Kristang textbook for beginners.

Along with Malacca Portuguese-Eurasian Association (MPEA) president Michael Gerald Singho, they published a textbook, Beng Prende Portugues Malaká (Papiá Cristang), also known as Come, Let's Learn Portugues Malaká (Papiá Cristang) for people who want to learn Kristang. The association also maintains an active Facebook page aimed at sharing and promoting information related to the Kristang language the Kristang way of life.

Vocabulary
Approximately 72.56% of the Kristang lexicon is creolised from Portuguese and 17.44% from Malay, in both cases with drastic truncation and alteration through an indigenous process known as dreamfishing. Due to this relatively high presence of Portuguese word roots and morphemes in its vocabulary, the Kristang lexicon thus superficially has much in common with other Portuguese-based creoles, including its closely-related cousin Patuá, and the near-extinct creoles of Indonesia and East Timor. However, the remaining 11% of the lexicon is derived from Chinese, Indian and Malay languages to varying degrees, and with revitalisation efforts in Singapore since 2016 further generating words drawn from other languages that have historical or contemporary connections to Kristang, including Armenian, Banjarese, Bugis (Buginese), Javanese, Malayalam, Mah Meri, Noongar, Seletar and Telugu. Metathesis was common in the derivation of the Kristang lexicon from Portuguese root words. e.g.
 * Portuguese gordo → Kristang godru "fat"

Polynomy
Kristang is a polynomic language, where standardisation of the language's spoken and written forms is dispreferred and the natural morphophonological and orthographic variation that Kristang developed as a result of its history and sociocultural context is preferred. This variation is usually concentrated around "famililects" spoken by families rather than geographical dialects, with Kristang famililects generally being categorisable into three distinct forms:


 * 1. A system based on Portuguese orthography
 * The 19th and 20th centuries saw a rise in the use of Modern Portuguese-based orthography (for example, Rego (1942) ) due to the perception of Kristang as a variety of Portuguese instead of a distinct creole language partially based on Old Portuguese. This is characterized by the use of diacritics such as acute accents (á, é, í, ó, ú). The system has been adopted by some native Kristang speakers as well.


 * 2. A system based on a mixture of Portuguese, English and Malay
 * Other speakers have used a system influenced by Portuguese, English and Malay orthography. This creates an issue as the system is inconsistent in the representation of Kristang sounds and are unintelligible immediately to both speakers and non-speakers of Kristang.


 * 3. A system based on Malay orthography
 * There are many observable parallels between the phonology of Malay and Kristang which has led to inherent similarities in the orthographic representations of the two languages as well. The first proposal for a standard Kristang orthography was made in 1973 by Ian F. Hancock (1973:25) who recognised this quality and advocated the Malay-based system due to the speakers' familiarity with it. This would, therefore, lead to a swift acquisition of literacy in the reading and writing of the Kristang language.
 * This system to spell Kristang was further expanded on in A Grammar of Kristang by Alan N. Baxter, in which he agreed on and emphasized the use of the Malay orthography. Published in 1995, Joan Margaret Marbeck's book Ungua Andanza also followed this approach, with the orthography written in a Luso-Malay context.

Letters of the alphabet
The Kristang alphabet contains all 26 letters of the Latin alphabet, although as mentioned not all families may use the same letters (or even all of them). There is variation in orthographic depth and in which letters are used to represent which sounds, depending on individual speaker and context (e.g. cuartu, kuartu, kuadru and quarto are all the same word).

Phonology
The acoustic and articulatory properties of Kristang have not been extensively studied. However, Hancock (1969, 1973 ), Batalha (1981), and most recently, Baxter (1988) have outlined brief descriptions of its sound system. In general, Kristang's inventory of consonant and vowel phonemes shows a significant parallel to that of Standard Malay.

Consonants
Orthographic note: Using a Malay-based orthography, the sounds are represented orthographically by their symbols as above, except:
 * is written as $⟨ny⟩$
 * is written as $⟨ng⟩$
 * is written as $⟨c⟩$ (or $⟨ch⟩$, a pre-1972 Malay letter)
 * is written as $⟨j⟩$

Portuguese words which begin with $⟨ch⟩$, pronounced ("sh") in modern Portuguese, are often pronounced as  ("ch") in Kristang, e.g.: This may be due to Malay influence, or the preservation of an Old Portuguese pronunciation in Kristang. It is also worth noting that Northern Portugal also retains the Portuguese pronunciation.
 * Portuguese chegar → Kristang chegak  "to arrive"
 * Portuguese chuva → Kristang chua  "rain"

Phonological contrasts
Baxter (1988), in particular, established various phonemic contrasts in the Kristang consonant system.

Stops and affricates contrast in the initial and medial positions.

Fricatives contrast in the medial positions. No clear distinctions between voiced-voiceless pairs and all fricative counterparts can be drawn as is highly infrequent and restricted in distribution and initial  has fallen into disuse. Nasals contrast do not contrast before a consonant, and no contrasts have been found in identical environments in the final position. In the initial position, only, and  contrast, while all nasals  contrast in the medial position. Tap, as well as lateral liquid consonants, contrast in all positions.

Vowels
The inventory of vowel phonemes in Kristang is also highly similar to Standard Malay vowel phonemes, which can be seen in the table above.

Diphthongs and vowel sequences
Diphthongs in Kristang are formed when either the vowel, or the vowel , occurs in the same syllable as another vowel. The vowel and  are pronounced as the semivowels (or glides)  and  respectively in such cases.

There are 10 word-internal diphthongs in Kristang as outlined by Baxter (1988). Of all 10, 3 ( as in rainya ‘queen’, as in chua ‘rain’ and  as in dia ‘day’) may also constitute hiatus, i.e. the vowels in would be pronounced as two distinct syllables in certain environments.

The relatively large number of diphthongs is also in contrast to Malay, whereby only three native diphthong phonemes are described: These diphthongs also display visible parallels to certain Kristang vowel sequences, and.
 * : kedai ('shop')
 * : kerbau ('buffalo')
 * : dodoi ('lullaby')

The Portuguese diphthong (or archaic ) are often reduced to  in Kristang in Portuguese loan words, e.g.: Kristang diphthongs are monosyllabic and the vowel sequences are differentiated according to its stress position. For example, the stress in is on the first vowel whereas in, the second vowel is stressed.
 * Portuguese dois/dous → Kristang dos 'two'
 * Portuguese à noite/à noute → Kristang anoti/anuti 'tonight'

Stress and rhythm
Kristang is a syllable-timed language (not unlike Malay which also displays syllable-based rhythm).

According to Baxter (2004), most polysyllabic words in Kristang can be classified into two large groups based on the stress position in the word. Most words which end in a vowel have tonic stress on the penultimate syllable. • kaza 'house'
 * Stress Rule A

• nomi 'name'

• rayu 'wicked'

• apoyu 'support'

• kumeria 'food'

• rua 'street' Most words which end in a consonant have tonic stress on the final syllable. • landes 'Dutch'
 * Stress Rule B

• natal 'Christmas' However, stress pattern is not completely predictable in Kristang, as there are also certain words which are exceptions to the above two rules.
 * Exception to Rule A
 * Verbs which end in a stressed vowel (e.g. kumi 'to eat'). Attention should be paid to the lexical stress in such instances as it brings about a difference in meaning (e.g. kaza 'house' vs kaza 'to marry").
 * Some vowel-ending words are also stressed on the antepenultimate syllable instead. (such as familia 'family', animu 'valour')
 * Exception to Rule B
 * Some consonant-ending words are stressed on the penultimate syllable (such as okel 'spectacles', nobas 'news')

Kristang also displays stress shifting in that many verbs display a tendency to shift their stress from the final syllable to penultimate syllable when followed by a stressed syllable in the next word, especially in rapid speech.

Grammar
The grammatical structure of Kristang is similar to that of the Malay language. The usage of verbs is one of the grammatical features of Kristang that displays this quality. While Portuguese verbs mainly use morphology, or suffixes, to change a verb's tense or for it to match with the person and number of its subject, Malay does not change the form of the verb itself. Instead, it makes use of pre-verbal words to convey tense and does not indicate the person or number of the subject in the form of the verb. Kristang's structure is practically identical to Malay, although the choice of words comes from Portuguese.

Syntax
Papiá Kristang has Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) word order in simple sentences. The direct human objects are case-marked by the preposition ku. The same preposition also marks indirect objects. Intransitive clauses, the case-marked indirect object may precede the direct object, especially when the former is pronominal. Noncore arguments are generally located either at the beginning or at the end of the sentence as shown in example (1).

Amiang Diego lo dá ku bos aké doi na butika

tomorrow Diego FUT give DAT 2SG that money LOC shop

'Tomorrow, Diego will give you that money, at the shop.'

Adversity Passive, which is used to talk about situations where a negative action happens to something, but the person or originator of the negative action is not mentioned something, is also present both in Kristang and Malay. The Adversity Passive is signalled by kena (Malay), and by tokah (Kristang).

For complex sentences, the phrases and clauses are joined by coordinating conjunctions ku "with, and", kě "or", and mas "but". There are also instances where object clauses may be headed by ki; however, this is rare and is only found in traditional formal registers, as in a wedding speech. The most frequent means of expressing nominal subordination is parataxis as shown in example (2) and (3).

Nus pidi ki tudu bolotu podi kumí sabrozu

1PL ask COMP all 3PL can eat tasty

'We ask that you may all eat to your satisfaction.'

Yo ja skribé ku eli Ø John ja kazá.

1SG PFV write ACC 3SG Ø John PFV marry

'I wrote to him that John has married.'

Adverbial clauses are headed by antis di "before", kiora "when", chuma "as", kantu "if", padi "in order to", kauzu ki "because", kifoi "because", etc., yet may also be indicated by parataxis without conjunctions.

Relative clauses are headed by ki "what, who’"(and very rarely by keng "who"), yet also commonly occur with a pronoun head or may occur without it. This can be seen in example (4) and (5).

Tantu yo sa kambra kambradu ki ja bai skola pun.

many 1SG GEN friend friend REL PFV go school too

'many of my friends who went to school too.'

Jenti prenya eli parí muré ja fiká pontianak.

person pregnant 3SG bear die PFV become vampire

'A pregnant woman who dies in childbirth becomes a vampire.' In Kristang, The noun phrase (NP) is a structure which can occur as subject of a verb, object of a verb, object of a relator or as a predicate.

There are five types of prenominal determiners in Kristang:

Quantifier: kada kaza

each house

'Each house’.

Numeral: dos prau

two boat

'Two boats’.

Interrogative determiner: kí redi ?

REL net Q

'What net?’

Demonstrative article: aké albi

DEM tree

'That tree.’ The demonstratives isi and ake(li) ‘that’ precede the noun and indicate a distance contrast.

Possessive NP + sa : eli sa irmáng femi

3S G sibling female

'His sister.’

Adnominal possessives precede the noun and consist of possessor (noun or pronoun) + genitive marker sa (or sě).

In comparative constructions of equality, the adjective is marked by iguál ‘equal’ and standard is marked by ku ‘with’:

John iguál grandi ku Peter.

John equal big with Peter

'John is as big as Peter.’

In the comparative construction of inequality, the adjective is marked by más ‘more’ and the standard by di ‘of’:

Eli más altu di Pio.

3SG more tall of Pio

'He is taller than Pio.’

The superlative comparison consists of the comparative of inequality plus a universal standard:

Maria más altu di tudu mbes aké femi femi.

Maria more tall of all once DEM female femmale

'Maria is the tallest of all the girls.’

There is only one set of personal pronouns, extending to the sixteenth person, that occurs in all pronominal functions. In some (but not all) families, the 3SG, 3PL, 7SG, 7PL, 11SG, 11PL, 15SG and 15PL pronouns only refer to animates, principally to humans. The 4SG, 4PL, 8SG, 8PL, 12SG, 12PL, 16SG and 16PL pronouns are used to refer to deities and four-dimensional personifications of collectives of sentient beings called eleidi. The aforementioned genitive marker sa or sě is sometimes written together with the pronoun preceding it as one word (e.g. yose, yosa for yo sa).

Morphology
Pluralisation is also the same in Malay as in Kristang. For example, in English and Portuguese, an ‘–s’ is added to make cats or gatos, whereas in Kristang and Malay, the entire word is duplicated, such as gatu-gatu in Kristang, and kucing-kucing in Malay. Reduplication is not only a feature of the noun class but also a feature of the adjective, adverb and verb classes. Adjectives and adverbs reduplicate to signify intensity: kěni~kěninu, “quite small, very small”, belu belu “quite old”, sedu sedu “quite/very early”. On the other hand, the interrogative pronouns reduplicate to signify indefiniteness: keng keng (who who) “whoever”, ki ki (what what “whatever”. As for the reduplication of the numerals, dos “two” and tres “three”, it gave the respective readings “in pairs” and “in threes”.

With nouns, reduplication can signal plurality, often involving partial reduplication: krenkrensa (= krensa + krensa) ‘children’, femfemi (= femi + femi) ‘women’. However, the reduplication of nouns with non-specific reference in object position may yield the meaning ‘all kinds of’ or ‘lots of’:

Yo sa sogru gadrá pastu pastu

1SG GEN father.in.law keep bird bird

'My father-in-law keeps all kinds of birds.'

Without reduplication, the above sentence would simply express plural: ‘birds’.

To indicate verb tenses, the following appositions are used: jah (i.e. from the Portuguese já, meaning "already", or controversially a corruption of Malay dah, shortened version of sudah, also "already") for past tenses; ta (from está, which means "is") for present continuous tenses and logu or lo (from logo, which means "soon") for the future tense. These simplified forms correspond with their equivalents in Malay sudah, sedang, and akan, respectively.

Papiá Kristang has two overt markers of aspect (ja ‘perfective’ and ta ‘imperfective’), an overt marker of future tense (lo(gu)), and a zero marker.

This table summarised the functions of these markers:

Example (15) shows the zero marker (Ø) with a dynamic verb of past or present habitual representation:

Yo sa pai Ø fai sibrisu na municipal.

1SG GEN father Ø do work LOC municipal

'My father works/used to work in the Municipal.'

Example (16) shows the marker ja with a dynamic verb, with perfective aspect representation:

Eli ja bai mar (onti anoti).

3SG PFV go sea yesterday night

'He went fishing (last night).'

The marker ta occurs with dynamic verbs in past or present contexts, with either a progressive reading, as in (17), or an iterative reading, as in (18):

Diego ta les buku.

Diego IPFV read book

'Diego is/was reading a book.'

Eli ta fai sibrisu na Singaporura.

3SG IPFV do work LOC Singapore

'He is/was working in Singapore.'

The marker lo(go) conveys a future or conditional reading, as in examples (19) and (20), respectively where it occurs with a dynamic verb:

Amiang out dia, eli logu bai mar.

tomorrow other day 3SG FUT go sea

'The day after tomorrow, he will go fishing.'

Kanti yo teng doi, yo lo kompra kareta.

if 1SG have money 1SG FUT buy car

'If I have/had the money I will/would buy a car.'

The Tense-Aspect-Mood (TAM) markers do not normally co-occur. Combinations of markers are very rare and when they do occur they appear to involve an adverbial reading of the initial marker. Thus, when ja is seen to combine with the imperfective marker ta, ja has the adverbial reading ‘already’ of its Portuguese source:

Kora yo ja chegá eli ja ta kumí

when 1SG PFV arrive 3SG already IPFV eat

'When I arrived, he was already eating.'

Numbers
Kristang has three counting systems in base-10, base-12 and base-16. Much of the lexicon for the base-10 numbers draws influence from Portuguese, a Romance language. However, unlike Portuguese, which distinguishes between the masculine and feminine forms of “one” (um/uma) and “two” (dois/duas), numbers in Kristang do not inflect for gender. The base-12 and base-16 numbers have wider origins, including Armenian and Javanese, but also draw on Portuguese to represent the single-digit numbers beyond 9, using letters of the Portuguese alphabet that are 'unused' in Kristang such as á in base-12 and ç in base-16.

Poem of Malacca

 * Keng teng fortuna fikah na Malaka,
 * Nang kereh partih bai otru tera.
 * Pra ki tudu jenti teng amizadi,
 * Kontu partih logu fikah saudadi.


 * Oh Malaka, tera di San Francisku,
 * Nteh otru tera ki yo kereh.
 * Oh Malaka undi teng sempri fresku,
 * Yo kereh fikah ateh mureh.

Portuguese translation:
 * Quem tem fortuna fica em Malaca,
 * Não quer partir para outra terra.
 * Por aqui toda a gente tem amizade,
 * Quando tu partes logo fica a saudade.


 * Ó Malaca, terra de São Francisco,
 * Não tem outra terra que eu queira.
 * Ó Malaca, onde tem sempre frescura,
 * Eu quero ficar até morrer.

English translation:
 * Who is lucky stays in Malacca,
 * Doesn't want to go to another land.
 * In here everyone has friendship,
 * When one leaves soon has saudade.


 * Oh Malacca, land of Saint Francis,
 * There is no other land that I want.
 * Oh Malacca, where there's always freshness,
 * I want to stay here until I die.

Malay translation:


 * Siapa beruntung tinggal di Melaka,
 * Tidak mahu ke tanah berbeza.
 * Di sini semua bersahabat,
 * Bila seorang pergi terasa rindu.


 * Oh Melaka, tanah Saint Francis,
 * Tiada tanah lain yang ku mahu.
 * Oh Melaka, dimana adanya kesegaran,
 * Aku mahu tinggal di sini hingga ke akhir nyawa.