Weight measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture

This paper discussed the findings of a preliminary survey on ethnomathematics measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture. Measurements involve in the study are weight/mass for ordinary items (general weight), weight for valuable metals and volumes to measure rice that represent weight. This study...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:CSSR 2010 - 2010 International Conference on Science and Social Research
Main Author: Yusharina Y.; Hilmi Z.A.G.; Rashid S.A.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79959675290&doi=10.1109%2fCSSR.2010.5773907&partnerID=40&md5=c6f6d31322d6152805b0e6c66eabb226
id 2-s2.0-79959675290
spelling 2-s2.0-79959675290
Yusharina Y.; Hilmi Z.A.G.; Rashid S.A.
Weight measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture
2010
CSSR 2010 - 2010 International Conference on Science and Social Research


10.1109/CSSR.2010.5773907
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79959675290&doi=10.1109%2fCSSR.2010.5773907&partnerID=40&md5=c6f6d31322d6152805b0e6c66eabb226
This paper discussed the findings of a preliminary survey on ethnomathematics measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture. Measurements involve in the study are weight/mass for ordinary items (general weight), weight for valuable metals and volumes to measure rice that represent weight. This study revealed from the literatures that have been looked into five general unit measurements on weight, eleven on weight for valuable metals and seven on weight as measured by volume of rice. Most of the measurements have been quantified since some of them are similar with the terms used in the common Malay culture. By comparing the quantity among the measurements, a system for weight measurements is constructed. The objective of this study is to retain the Malay Minangkabau culture as a historical knowledge and heritage while uplifting the Malay language in the field of mathematical sciences in this country. Nevertheless, there is still room for further studies since the list of measurements is perhaps not comprehensive and emphasis should be placed on the origins of the words being used in the measurement (etymology). © 2010 IEEE.


English
Conference paper

author Yusharina Y.; Hilmi Z.A.G.; Rashid S.A.
spellingShingle Yusharina Y.; Hilmi Z.A.G.; Rashid S.A.
Weight measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture
author_facet Yusharina Y.; Hilmi Z.A.G.; Rashid S.A.
author_sort Yusharina Y.; Hilmi Z.A.G.; Rashid S.A.
title Weight measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture
title_short Weight measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture
title_full Weight measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture
title_fullStr Weight measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture
title_full_unstemmed Weight measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture
title_sort Weight measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture
publishDate 2010
container_title CSSR 2010 - 2010 International Conference on Science and Social Research
container_volume
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1109/CSSR.2010.5773907
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79959675290&doi=10.1109%2fCSSR.2010.5773907&partnerID=40&md5=c6f6d31322d6152805b0e6c66eabb226
description This paper discussed the findings of a preliminary survey on ethnomathematics measurements in the Malay Minangkabau culture. Measurements involve in the study are weight/mass for ordinary items (general weight), weight for valuable metals and volumes to measure rice that represent weight. This study revealed from the literatures that have been looked into five general unit measurements on weight, eleven on weight for valuable metals and seven on weight as measured by volume of rice. Most of the measurements have been quantified since some of them are similar with the terms used in the common Malay culture. By comparing the quantity among the measurements, a system for weight measurements is constructed. The objective of this study is to retain the Malay Minangkabau culture as a historical knowledge and heritage while uplifting the Malay language in the field of mathematical sciences in this country. Nevertheless, there is still room for further studies since the list of measurements is perhaps not comprehensive and emphasis should be placed on the origins of the words being used in the measurement (etymology). © 2010 IEEE.
publisher
issn
language English
format Conference paper
accesstype
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1809677788776497152