| Hi everyone, I'm Windy Anggraini. |
| Hi, nama saya Windy Anggraini. |
| Welcome to the Indonesian Whiteboard Lessons. |
| In this lesson, you'll learn how to give your email address in Indonesian. |
| Let's get started. |
| Okay, let's look at the vocabulary. |
| First, we have ah, a. |
| Next, beh, b. |
| Next, we have che, pronounced somewhat like ch as in church. |
| c, che, deh, d. |
| Next, we have eh, e. |
| ef, f. |
| Next, we have geh, g. |
| ha, h. |
| Next, we have ie, pronounced like ""ee"" as in ""bee."" |
| ie, i. |
| Next, we have djeh, j. |
| ka, k. |
| Next, we have el, l. |
| Next, em, m. |
| Next, we have en, n. |
| oh, o. |
| Next, we have peh, p. |
| key, q. |
| Next, we have er, r. |
| es, s. |
| Next, teh, t. |
| Next, we have u, pronounced like ""oo"" as in ""food."" |
| u, u. |
| Next, feh, v. |
| Next, we have weh, w. |
| Next, we have ex, x. |
| ye, y. |
| Last, we have zet, z. |
| Let's look at the dialogue. |
| When I read, I want you to pay attention to the email. |
| Find the alphabets and see how it's used in the dialogue. |
| Boleh saya minta email Anda? |
| Boleh. Email saya |
| er-u-ka-em-oh-en-oh@innolang.com |
| Can you give me your email? |
| Sure. My email is r-u-k-m-o-n-o@innolang.com |
| Now, let's look at the sentence pattern. |
| This pattern will be the structure that all of our dialogue follows. |
| Email saya [email address]. |
| My email is [email address]. |
| Saya means my, first person singular possessive. |
| Anda means you, used to address someone of higher status, someone older, or someone that you don't know very well. |
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