kertas

Indonesian

Etymology

From Malay kertas, from Arabic قَرْطَاس (qarṭās), from Ancient Greek χάρτης (khártēs). Doublet of kardus, kartel, karton, kartu, and katrij.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kərˈtas/
  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: kêr‧tas

Noun

kêrtas (first-person possessive kertasku, second-person possessive kertasmu, third-person possessive kertasnya)

  1. paper: a sheet material used for writing on or printing on (or as a non-waterproof container), usually made by draining cellulose fibres from a suspension in water.

Derived terms

  • kertas ampelas
  • kertas aspal
  • kertas berharga
  • kertas bungkus
  • kertas dinding
  • kertas embos
  • kertas embun
  • kertas gambar
  • kertas isap
  • kertas jamban
  • kertas jernih
  • kertas kabar
  • kertas kado
  • kertas karbon
  • kertas kedap lemak
  • kertas kembang
  • kertas kerja
  • kertas koran
  • kertas lap
  • kertas lilin
  • kertas manila
  • kertas merang
  • kertas minyak
  • kertas oles
  • kertas penapis
  • kertas penetap
  • kertas rokok
  • kertas sampul
  • kertas samson
  • kertas sap
  • kertas saring
  • kertas satin
  • kertas segel
  • kertas seloidin
  • kertas serap
  • kertas skor
  • kertas tekap
  • kertas telur
  • kertas tisu
  • kertas toilet
  • kertas toni
  • kertas tulis

Further reading

Malay

Etymology

From Arabic قِرْطَاس (qirṭās), ultimately from Ancient Greek χάρτης (khártēs).

  • Semantic loan from English paper for a set of examination questions.

Noun

kertas (Jawi spelling کرتس, plural kertas-kertas, informal 1st possessive kertasku, 2nd possessive kertasmu, 3rd possessive kertasnya)

  1. paper:
    1. a sheet material used for writing on or printing on (or as a non-waterproof container), usually made by draining cellulose fibres from a suspension in water.
    2. (Brunei, Malaysia, Singapore, education) a set of examination questions to be answered at one session.

Descendants

  • Indonesian: kertas
  • Khmer: ក្រដាស (krɑdaah)
  • Ternate: kartas

Further reading

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