Some Osing words have the infix /-y-/ 'ngumbyah', 'kidyang', which are pronounced /ngumbah/ and /kidang/ in standard Javanese, respectively.
[2] A dictionary of the language was published in 2002 by Hasan Ali, an advocate for the language's use in Banyuwangi.
[3] Divergent Osing vocabulary includes:[2]
This Austronesian languages-related article is a stub.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This Indonesia-related article is a stub.