Home

milikku

Milikku is a word from Indonesian and Malay that means “mine” or “my property.” It is formed from the noun milik, meaning possession or ownership, combined with the first-person possessive suffix -ku, creating a fused form that indicates that something belongs to the speaker. It functions as a possessive pronoun or determiner within a sentence.

In everyday usage, milikku is used to express ownership of an object or attribute. For example, in

Usage notes and nuance: milikku often carries a straightforward, emphatic assertion of ownership. In informal speech

See also: ownership in Indonesian and Malay, milik (possession), possessive pronouns in Indonesian, pemilik (owner). There

Indonesian
one
can
say,
“Buku
itu
milikku,”
meaning
“That
book
is
mine.”
The
form
can
also
be
used
with
other
possessive
pronouns,
such
as
milikmu
(yours),
miliknya
(his/her/its),
milik
kita
(our),
milik
kalian
(your
plural),
and
milik
mereka
(their),
to
indicate
different
owners.
or
writing,
it
may
appear
in
social
media,
casual
conversations,
or
literary
contexts
where
a
concise,
personal
possessive
statement
is
desired.
In
formal
contexts,
the
property
relationship
is
typically
expressed
with
phrases
like
“milik
saya”
or
“milik
Anda,”
depending
on
courtesy
level
and
register.
is
no
widely
recognized
entity
or
institution
named
“Milikku”
as
a
standard
term;
when
encountered
as
a
title
or
brand,
it
would
be
a
proper
noun
derived
from
this
ordinary
linguistic
form.