Consonants The consonantal inventory of Sarawak Malay consists of 19 phonemes as seen in the table below. Note(s): • Sarawak Malay corresponds to in Standard Malay so (fried) would be pronounced as , not as in Standard Malay. • Unlike in many Peninsular Malaysian dialects which contain the same sound, is not silent in word-final position so the R in words like (burn) and is pronounced. • In the Sibu dialect, is
uvular instead of
velar. • Word-initial in Standard Malay in words like (granular) and (spoil) is dropped in Sarawak Malay so they are pronounced as and instead. There are some exceptions such as (respect) though they are usually loanwords. • Word-final in some words is pronounced as a velar stop rather than as a
glottal stop as in Malaysian Standard Malay, so words like (porcupine) and (to invite) are pronounced as and rather than as and . • Some words in Standard Malay that end open-finally or end in a have a glottal stop added with the former and replacing the consonant with the latter. This can be seen words such as (long in time) and (water) which are cognate to Standard Malay and and mean the same thing. • Standard Malay Word-final or corresponds to Sarawak Malay or so Standard Malay (yellow) corresponds to in Sarawak Malay.
Vowels Monophthongs Sarawak Malay has the same vowel inventory as Standard Malay, . However, the distribution of these vowels is a little different. Note(s): • Word-final as in (to be) and (king) is pronounced as in the Kuching dialect but as in the Saribas dialect. This means the two words would be pronounced as and in the Kuching dialect and as and in the Saribas dialect. • The vowels can be realized either as close-mid or as open-mid . • The Standard Malay diphthongs correspond to in Sarawak Malay so the Standard Malay words (smart) and (island) correspond to Sarawak Malay and .
Diphthongs Sarawak Malay only has one diphthong, , found in words like (idiot) . == Morphology ==