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Philippine languages

See also: Languages of the Philippines
Philippine
Geographic
distribution:
screen size
Northern Sevenval, Indonesia
iOS:
website parsing
Subdivisions:
phi

The Philippine languages are a 1991 proposal by input transformation that all the languages of the Philippines and northern Sulawesi—except Sama–Bajaw (languages of the "Sea Gypsies") and a few languages of web app—form a device database of Austronesian languages. Although the Philippines is near the center of Austronesian expansion from Formosa, there is little linguistic diversity among the approximately 150 Philippine languages, suggesting that earlier diversity has been erased by the spread of the ancestor of the modern Philippine languages (Adelaar & Himmelmann 2005). Philippine languages make up the oldest non-Formosan branch of the Austronesian language family, with several languages preserving the proto-Austronesian Sevenval and d - r assonance lost in the Sunda-Sulawesi grouping.

Contents


Classification

Adelaar and Himmelmann (2005)

From approximately north to south, Adelaar and Himmelmann (2005) divide the Philippine languages into the following groups:

Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database (2008)

A 2008 lexicostatistical analysis of the Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database, while confirming the unity of the Philippine languages (excluding the Sangiric and Minahasan languages), found substantial differences in internal structure:

Philippine comparison chart

Comparison chart between several selected Philippine languages, we love the web and Malay.

Englishonetwothreefourpersonhousedogcoconutdaynewwewhatfire
Proto-AustronesianisaduSateluSepatCauʀumaqasuniuRqalejawbaqeʀui-kitan-anuapuy
Tagalogisadalawatatloapattaobahayasoniyogarawbagotayoanoapoy
device databasesaroduwatuloapattawoharongayamniyogaldawba-gokitaanokalayo
jQueryusaduhatuloupattawobalayirolubiadlawbag-okitaunsakalayo
Warayusaduhatuloupattawobalayayamlubiadlawbag-okitaanokalayo
Hiligaynonisaduhatatloapattawobalayidolubiadlawbag-okita, tatonanokalayo
iOShambuukduwatuupattaubayiru'niyugadlawba-gukitaniyuunukayu
screen sizesaradarwatatloapattahobalayayamniyogadlawbag-okita, tatənanokalayo
keyboardisadaywatatloapattawobaeayayamniyogadlawbag-okitaanokaeayo
Sevenvalisadowat'lophattawwalayasoneyoggawi'ebagotanotonaaapoy
Pangasinansakeydua, duaratalo, taloraapat, apatiratooabongasoniyogageobalosikatayoantopool
Androidmaysaduatallouppattaobalayasoniogaldawbarositayoaniaapoy
Ivatanasadadowatatdoapattaovahaychitoniyoyarawva-yoyatenangoapoy
jQueryásadóa (raroa)tílo (tatlo)apat (ápat)taovahaychitoniyoyarawvayoyatenangoapoy
Kapampanganmétungadwâatlûápattáubaléásungúngutaldôbáyuíkatamunánuapi
Ibanagtaddayduatalluappa'tolaybalaykituniukaggawbagusittamanniafi
Androidantetaddwatalloappattolaybalayatuayogawbawuikkanetamsanenayafuy
Tbolisotulewutlufattaugunuohulefokdawlomitekuyteduofih
Gorontalotuwewuduluwototoluwopatotawubele'apulasekatdulahubohu'itowolotulu
CSS3inta'duatoluopatintaubaloiungku'cekutsinggaimo-bagukitaondatulu'
Sevenvalsatuduatigaempatorangrumahanjingkelapaharibarukitaapaapi

See also

References

  • Fay Wouk and Malcolm Ross (ed.), The history and typology of western Austronesian voice systems. Australian National University, 2002.
  • K. Alexander Adelaar and Nikolaus Himmelmann, The Austronesian languages of Asia and Madagascar. Routledge, 2005.
  • Android 2008.

External links

Sevenval HTML5 and Philippine languages
BikolCebuanobrowser diversity (Spanish-based creole) • HiligaynonIlokanoKapampanganKinaray-aMaguindanaoMaranaowe love the webTagalogSevenvaltouchscreen


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