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  2. Dwiki Dharmawan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwiki_Dharmawan

    Dwiki Dharmawan (born 19 August 1966) is an Indonesian singer-songwriter, orchestrator and conductor. He began taking classical piano lessons at the age of six, then began writing songs and founding Krakatau with his bandmates Pra Budi Dharma and Donny Suhendra in high school.

  3. Koobits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koobits

    KooBits (stylised as KooBits with capitalised K and B) designs and builds digital products for children and educators. KooBits was founded in 2016 by current CEO Stanley, with Professor Sam Ge Shuzhi and Dr Chen Xiangdong. [1] The trio saw an opportunity in the rapid growth of the ebook industry and decided to focus on creating software for ...

  4. List of songs written by Dwiki Dharmawan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_songs_written_by...

    Dwiki Dharmawan in 2013. During his 40-year career, the Indonesian pop songwriter Dwiki Dharmawan wrote many songs, either by himself or in collaboration with others.. After starting his professional music career as a keyboardist with the band Krakatau in the late 1980s, Dharmawan wrote his first religious song "Dengan Menyebut Nama Allah" in 1990 for his first special studio album of the same ...

  5. Agency for Language Development and Cultivation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agency_for_Language...

    The Agency for Language Development and Cultivation (Indonesian: Badan Pengembangan dan Pembinaan Bahasa), formerly the Language and Book Development Agency (Badan Pengembangan Bahasa dan Perbukuan) and the Language Centre (Pusat Bahasa), is the institution responsible for standardising and regulating the Indonesian language as well as maintaining the indigenous languages of Indonesia.

  6. Languages of Sulawesi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Sulawesi

    The Sangiric languages are spoken in North Sulawesi, and in the southern Philippines on the Sarangani Islands off the southern coast of Mindanao. The following internal classification is based on Sneddon (1984): [10] North Sangiric: Sangir, Talaud ( Sangil – not spoken on Sulawesi) South Sangiric: Bantik, Ratahan.

  7. Luqman (sūrah) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luqman_(sūrah)

    Luqman (sūrah) Luqman ( Arabic: لقمان, romanized : Luqmān) is the 31st sūrah of the Qur'an. It is composed of 34 verses ( āyāt) and takes its title from the mention of the sage Luqman and his advice to his son in verses 12–19. According to asbāb al-nuzūl or Islamic traditional chronology, it was revealed in the middle of the ...

  8. Batak script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batak_script

    Northern Brahmic. Southern Brahmic. v. t. e. The Batak script (natively known as surat Batak, surat na sampulu sia ("the nineteen letters"), or si-sia-sia) is a writing system used to write the Austronesian Batak languages spoken by several million people on the Indonesian island of Sumatra.

  9. Indonesian language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indonesian_language

    Indonesian ( Bahasa Indonesia; [baˈhasa indoˈnesija]) is the official and national language of Indonesia. [8] It is a standardized variety of Malay, [9] an Austronesian language that has been used as a lingua franca in the multilingual Indonesian archipelago for centuries. Indonesia is the fourth most populous nation in the world, with over ...