RSS Subscription


(From Left 2: Tan Kok Wai, Lim Lip Eng, Me and Fong Kui Lun)

Send post as PDF to PDF | PDF Creator | PDF Converter

Share/Save/Bookmark

11 Responses to “We Have Erected 10 Muhibbah Road Signs in Kuala Lumpur Area”

  1. on 20 Feb 2008 at 13: 01.25 Aaron

    I like it!!!
    The road signs with Chinese & Indian translations reflect the multi-racial character of the country.
    It is acceptable to most Malaysians indeed!!!

  2. on 20 Feb 2008 at 15: 47.38 alex

    Such road signs should be seen in everywhere within Malaysia. But i doubt others will work out for it to be happen.

    Really wondering what was going on? Why a DAP can make it, but a Barisan, which completed with 14 parties just never think about it….

  3. on 20 Feb 2008 at 19: 44.49 lee wee tak

    won’t the DBKL staff tear down the road sign?

    I bet they will.

  4. on 21 Feb 2008 at 08: 06.58 choong

    Isn’t there rules on who can and should erect road signs? anyway, i agree with alex, we need more road signs like these.

  5. on 21 Feb 2008 at 13: 23.00 yeohts

    Excellent DAP! The purpose of the road-signs are to inform travelers, so how are they going to serve the purpose if the language is not international or multi-lingual?

  6. on 22 Feb 2008 at 00: 21.31 sheriff singh

    You need me to write in Sikh?

  7. on 22 Feb 2008 at 00: 23.52 sheriff singh

    And the Myanmarese fellow will write in Burmese for his fellow workers.

    And them Bangladeshis will be most happy to oblige so that their countrymen won’t get lost.

  8. on 23 Feb 2008 at 19: 03.36 bjsong

    should’ve erected another road sign: JALAN CHUA SOI LEK for good measure.

  9. on 02 Mar 2008 at 04: 42.06 zie

    Good job! I’ll keep an eye for these the next time I’m around the area. While Malay-only roadsigns are readable enough for most people to understand, they don’t reflect our multicultural society as these roadsigns do :)

    Just a small note though, I noticed that Traditional Chinese is used. Wouldn’t it be better to use Simplified Chinese considering that it’s more common nowadays? The only instance I could recall where Traditional Chinese is used is on newspaper headlines.

  10. [...] Selangor and Perak, can we see more Muhibbah Road Signs (Malay + Chinese + Tamil) all over the [...]

  11. [...] Tamil signboard? By Mahendran Update : The first signboard in Tamil in Malaysia. Thanks to YB Teresa Kok. [...]

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.