Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Malaysian. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Malaysian Quotes And Sayings by 92 Authors including Kevin Kwan,Alain De Botton,Psy,Mohamed Latiff Mohamed,Pittacus Lore for you to enjoy and share.
I spent the first 12 years of my life growing up in Singapore. Back then, in the early '80s, it was still a tropical island at the tip of the Malay Peninsula striving to shine on the world stage.
Confinement. This morning the plane was over the Malay peninsula,
Unexpectedly, I'm here now, so I need to let all the U.S. marketers know that Asians are not different. We are all the same.
Merdeka!' the Malay man screamed.
'Merdekaaaaaa!' the sea of people echoed.
The Mogadorian caught Number One in Malaysia,
Number Two in England,
And Number Three in Kenya.
I am Number Four.
I am next ...
- I AM NUMBER FOUR
Japanese tea ceremony,
And what exotic part of the world do you come from?
There are genuine concerns about the status of children to be sent to Malaysia and also there are genuine concerns about the human rights record in Malaysia.
Singapore had taken a much more, well, Singaporean approach to the problem of hippies than the Malaysians had. They'd let them in, but only if they got a haircut.
From a labour point of view, there are practically three races, the Malays the Chinese and Tamils. By nature, the Malay is an idler, the Chinaman is a thief, and the Indian is a drunkard. Yet each, in his special class of work, is both cheap and efficient when properly supervised.
Orang Indonesia memang tak pernah siap, We started fighting first and thinking later
I guess I'm kind of a mutt. I was born in the U.S., my parents are from Mexico, and I grew up in Switzerland. It's weird because I sound American, but I spell theater 'theatre' with the 'r' before the 'e'.
Cambodian! Don't we know each other until we die separately?
English. That was where I met him.
Guru in the Ukraine,
I come from a multicultural family.
I was born in Singapore, and I lived there until I was 12. I had a very fortunate upbringing.
As the leader of Southeast Asia's oldest democracy, I am always keen to share our experiences. In the half-century since independence, we have found that steady reform is the best way to secure lasting stability. It is a process that continues in Malaysia to this day.
My siblings and I are known as ABCs, American-born Chinese.
I'm trying to learn from various corners of the world.
Maktub" (It is written.)
I know somebody in every culture.
Foreign visitors ... how impressed you all are with foreign visitors! But they come in many different varieties.
I am Tamil, Sinhalese, Muslim and Burgher. I am a Buddhist, a Hindu, a follower of Islam and Christianity. I am today, and always, proudly Sri Lankan.
I make American films for American audiences and Asian films for Asian audiences.
This country, the Republic of Indonesia, does not belong to any group, nor to any religion, nor to any ethnic group, nor to any group with customs and traditions, but the property of all of us from Sabang to Merauke!
ORANGE MARMALADE',
I cook the food of Macau, my roots and soul food.
I just like the people and the culture of Southeast Asia.
And what sort of lively lads with the pencil those Chinese are, many queer cups and saucers inform us.
MANUFACTURER: mnm.MOD
Maybe he was Filipino. Was that in Asia? Probably. Asia's out-of-control huge.
I don't want to be like, yes, I think the American answer is always stupid, or I think it's always the right answer. So I'm in this weird place there. I'm feeling it out. Cambodia is going through an enormous amount of change right now. Daily.
'Singaporeans first' is different from saying 'Singaporeans only.'
Now it's time for amasians ... That's Asians doing something amazing.
traditional British tea.
I was born in America, but I consider myself a Filipino.
My homeland is the portuguese language.
Malavika Vishwanath. Don't try to say it you'll just piss me off.
Was born into a middle-class Tamil family in the island town of Rameswaram in the erstwhile Madras state.
Stupid, perfect Asian kid
Speaks cheerful English and in the past has written this language with a paintbrush that talks.
If it has four legs and is not a chair, has wings and is not an aeroplane, or swims and is not a submarine, the Cantonese will eat it.
What is China but a people and their stories?
English, I know you ... you are German with a license to kill.
You know the Singaporean. He is a hard-working, industrious, rugged individual. Or we would not have made the grade. But let us also recognise that he is a champion grumbler.
American? Indian? I don't know what these words mean. In Italy, it is all about blood, family, where you come from. I'm asked where I am from. I'm from nowhere; I always was, but now I am happy knowing it.
Singaporeans, if I can chose an analogy, we are the hard disk of a computer, the foreign talent are the megabytes you add to your storage capacity. So your computer never hangs because you got enormous storage capacity.
Insofar as Pancasila is concerned, I am only its formulator: a formulator of those feelings which have been present silently in the heart of the Indonesian people.
Middle-class Pakistani cultural life is what I've seen, what I know - they're not all screaming faceless mullahs. It's disturbing that in American films, the character on the other side is not even named.
I was very impressed with the street food of Singapore. I was very impressed with the dishes that they did.
In a much larger sense, the problem of Sabah is directly influenced by the duplicity of imperial Britain. For whatever devious reason, the dismantling of the British empire created divisions and violence due to ethnic and religious differences.
someone in Tunis. Halabi
she's part Armenian,
As a friend of mine told me about Real Happiness: you wrote this one in American.
I think that at heart I am an old-fashioned Chinese, really I am.
The Philippine races, like all the Malays, do not succumb before the foreigner, like the Australians, the Polynesians and the Indians of the New World.
A Texan outside of Texas is a foreigner.
Malaysia-Singapore bilateral relations can blossom beautifully if cultivated and nurtured like an orchid plant.
In Taiwan, I'd be like Michael Jordan walking down the street.
I was born and raised in Essex, just outside London, to a financially comfortable, well-educated Pakistani family.
I'm Anna May Wong. I come from old Hong Kong. But now I'm a Hollywood star.
The majority of my blood is Asian.
I was born a proud daughter of Pakistan, though like all Swatis I thought of myself first as a Swati and Pashtun, before Pakistani.
All talk on Islamic States is just an empty dream. No man in his right sense would accept a nation which bases its political administration on religion, and in a country like Malaysia with its multiracial and multireligious people, there is no room for an Islamic State.
I remember vividly one distinct memory of arriving in Hong Kong and being the only blonde haired girl in this sea of international students, and thinking, 'Oh, my God. There's no hiding here.'
Pleasure to meet you too, mister. Wake me up when we get to Singapore.
What business is it of yours where I'm from, friendo?
I consider myself to be an international woman.
Very often we talk about India and China, but not really Malaysia and Indonesia. The potential in the shift to the East is going to be great and very important for this country.
I thought about my [Punjabi] family. The only nakshatram we think about is the division of petrol pumps when we have to see the girl.
The first thing I do whenever I go to Thailand is seek out the closest restaurant or stall selling mango-and-sticky rice: it's a little hillock of glutinous rice drenched in lashings of coconut milk and served with fresh mango.
Basically, Koreans are the Marlboro Men of Asia.
Ting-a-ling mother fucker.
There are very few people who are Asian who have the kind of global reach that I have, not just with Asians but with non-Asians. I've worked hard for what my name represents, my brand, not just in Britain but around the world.
I am an Asian designer. I was born in Taiwan. That is who I am. But I am a designer, like any designer of any race. Growing up in the '80s in Taiwan, the arts were not considered a career.
I think in my mother tongue. That's Hindi.
Singapore is the happiest place in Asia
I'm an Asian guy growing up in London so I see myself as British, but India is part of my culture.
I feel partly American, but I have an ambiguous relation with both America and India, the only two countries I really know. I never feel fully one way or the other.
I'm German in my mind, but from a Germany that doesn't exist any more.
I come from rather an international, or in other words, a cosmopolitan background.
Indonesia, women are absolutely 100 percent equal to men
We are Indians, firstly and lastly.
I look like I'm Chinese or Thai or Japanese - very different.
Irish as a Paddy's pig.
I'm not the only foreigner who took up golf while living in Jakarta.
There is great potential and deep fragility [in Malaysia] that can be used by any group that stresses on religion, pushing towards Islam, rejecting people and alienating migrants - anything can be used to win the next elections. So these are the signs of fragility that is very much there.
The only thing Oriental about me is my face,
her cheeks a slight Asian red;
I am a Maharashtrian and I am extremely proud of that. But I am an Indian first. And Mumbai belongs to all Indians.
In America, I'm a foreigner because of my Korean heritage. In Asia, because I was born in America, I'm a foreigner. I'm always a foreigner.
UK - that was Britain.
My background is Scottish.
Sir Seretse Khama,
My little china girl
you shouldn't mess with me
The identity of the Filipino today is of a person asking what is his identity.
My look is 'Poly'n'Asian' - part Polynesian native, part Asian warrior.
Burmese babies - fat, little, brown little divils, as
A traditional Englishman drinks tea to the point where his blood has long-since been replaced with an infusion of Ceylon, Assam, and Darjeeling.