Ĭentral Javanese is also used in the western part of East Java province. The term is from Sanskrit krama ('in order'). It is used by persons of lower status to persons of higher status, such as young people to their elders, or subordinates to bosses and it is the official style for public speeches, announcements, etc. It is used between those of the same status when they do not wish to be informal. The term is from Sanskrit madhya ('middle'). Strangers on the street would use it, where status differences may be unknown and one wants to be neither too formal nor too informal. It is also used by persons of higher status (such as elders, or bosses) addressing those of lower status (young people, or subordinates in the workplace). Informal speech, used between friends and close relatives. Each employs its own vocabulary, grammatical rules, and even prosody. In Austronesian there are often three distinct styles or registers. In common with other Austronesian languages, Javanese is spoken differently depending on the social context.
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