English edit

Etymology edit

From Sumba +‎ -n- +‎ -ese.

Adjective edit

Sumbanese (not comparable)

  1. Of or relating to Sumba or its people or language.

Alternative forms edit

Noun edit

Sumbanese (plural Sumbanese)

  1. A person belonging to the native Austronesian people of the island of Sumba.
    • 1952, The Bible Translator:
      However, fasting as a prescribed ritual act is unknown to the Sumbanese. The other day I asked a young Sumbanese, who was a graduate of a three-year primary school, but not yet a church member, what was meant in the reading book by ...
    • 1997, Janet Hoskins, The Play of Time: Kodi Perspectives on Calendars, History, and Exchange, Univ of California Press, →ISBN, page 37:
      Indeed, a profound ambivalence is expressed in stories about both European traders and the Bimanese, as in this one, collected by Kruyt in Weyewa in 1920: In the old days, the Sumbanese were friends with the "white foreigners" and the ...
    • 2008, Jan Sihar Aritonang, Karel Adriaan Steenbrink, A History of Christianity in Indonesia, BRILL, →ISBN, page 322:
      A third missionary, C. de Bruijn, was sent to work more specifically among the Sumbanese, but in his long period of duty (1892–1927) he also concentrated on the Sawunese in Kambaniru. The last decades of the nineteenth century were a ...

Usage notes edit

As with other terms for people formed with -ese, the countable singular noun in reference to a person (as in "I am a Sumbanese", "writing about Sumbanese cuisine as a Sumbanese") is uncommon and often taken as incorrect. In its place, the adjective is used, by itself (as in "I am Sumbanese") or with a word like person, man, or woman ("writing about Sumbanese cuisine as a Sumbanese person").

Proper noun edit

Sumbanese

  1. An Austronesian language or dialect continuum spoken in eastern Sumba.
    Synonym: Kambera