Top 10 Languages Spoken in Philippines

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  • Опубліковано 14 гру 2017
  • In this video, the top 10 languages spoken in the Philippines. It includes Tagalog or Filipino, Bisaya, Ilocano, Bicol, Illongo, Waray, Chavacano, Pangasinense, Cebuano, Kapampangan, and Hiligaynon. Local, national and official languages of the Philippines.
    For more info visit:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languag...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philipp...
    faq.ph/top-10-languages-used-i...
    Cold Funk - Funkorama by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,6 тис.

  • @HeronPHL
    @HeronPHL  4 роки тому +51

    Which is the most pleasant to your ears? 🤔😊

    • @clairechavoso8363
      @clairechavoso8363 4 роки тому +22

      Hiligaynon, the most sweet language in the Philippines

    • @mojiahedadam9417
      @mojiahedadam9417 4 роки тому

      HeronPHL my tribe Maguindanaon has more population than Waray or Bicol tribe

    • @paulaujero3998
      @paulaujero3998 4 роки тому +13

      Hiligaynon eh. kasi yung bisaya parang galit mag salita

    • @phototoy3048
      @phototoy3048 4 роки тому +9

      quien ta intende chavacano?

    • @herbertpreira1701
      @herbertpreira1701 3 роки тому +6

      hiligaynon is the sweetest and pleasant to hear

  • @channelmovedtoalluringplan1452
    @channelmovedtoalluringplan1452 4 роки тому +122

    Born in Hawaii. Brought up only learning Ilocano. Family is from Northern Provinces and Mountain Provinces of PI. Now live in California. Wish I knew Tagalog, but I am Ilocano strong and proud!

    • @yuantheabsolutegreatbeing
      @yuantheabsolutegreatbeing 4 роки тому +3

      Woahhh an ilocano speaker... Kumusta ka pare?😄

    • @erikapatao1497
      @erikapatao1497 4 роки тому +1

      I’m mad my parents never taught me ilocano

    • @cyjomadizznuts
      @cyjomadizznuts 4 роки тому +5

      Lot of grade 5 too high know the Hawaiian are speaking ilocano

    • @tiffytif131
      @tiffytif131 3 роки тому

      Lol I only speak tagalog but when someone older who is talking to me I always speak ilocano

    • @johnaaronmari1175
      @johnaaronmari1175 3 роки тому +1

      @@erikapatao1497 hahhaha ukininam agbiag ilocano

  • @darkbluecraft25yt19
    @darkbluecraft25yt19 5 років тому +437

    Cebuano/Bisaya are the largest ethnic language in the Philippines

    • @darkbluecraft25yt19
      @darkbluecraft25yt19 5 років тому +9

      @Simple Joe there are less ilocano in my home town especially ilonggo

    • @renoelrule1325
      @renoelrule1325 5 років тому +22

      Cebuano is most widely used by some. No doubt. Si Vice nga eh gusto makag speak nang bisaya (just saying)..no hate.

    • @clifflifeofw1595
      @clifflifeofw1595 5 років тому +8

      Buong Northern Luzon speak Ilocano, these includes CAR, Isabela and Pangasinan

    • @jayferson8216
      @jayferson8216 5 років тому +46

      Buong Mindanao at malaking portion ng Visayas nagsasalita ng Bisaya(Cebuano). Mga Muslim sa Mindanao marunong magsalita ng Bisaya(Cebuano). Bisaya gyud ang pinakadaghan!

    • @alexfernandez1313
      @alexfernandez1313 5 років тому +6

      ilonngo cebuano waray boholano maguindanao dabawenyo tagalog. alam ko yan

  • @jayraneefrande805
    @jayraneefrande805 5 років тому +79

    I'm naturally born Filipino but I can speak Japanese, Korean, Arabic, English, Tagalog, Cebuano at illongo! Proud Pinay here 🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭

    • @TYGVlogger
      @TYGVlogger 3 роки тому +3

      Same but I speak Italian, English, Spanish, Portuguese, Tagalog!!

    • @DinkyWinkie69
      @DinkyWinkie69 3 роки тому +1

      Oof I can only speak English and Tagalog :')

    • @jerrystaana3891
      @jerrystaana3891 2 роки тому

      Tyrwqplkjmbvc xzcdsfg ytwq mklnbh vgydz!

    • @meline7047
      @meline7047 2 роки тому

      I am also a Filipino but I can speak English,Arabic,French,Ilocano,German and Tagalog I'm still learning Chinese and Burmese

    • @ryokohonda4619
      @ryokohonda4619 2 роки тому

      Wow you are an A1 mutilinguist

  • @hi-ii8cl
    @hi-ii8cl 6 років тому +172

    French , tagalog , bisaya and IIocano cause I’m born in France and my parents r born in the Philippines my mom is IIocana and my dad is bisaya :) Proud for being a Filipino 🇵🇭

    • @marisaclavelinabuentipo7451
      @marisaclavelinabuentipo7451 5 років тому +1

      If u go to my province in the north in abra majority dialect is ilocano and of course as a medium of instruction in school we do speak english and tagalog. but aside from ilocano the tinguians or the tribes in different mountainous municipalities has 5 dialects. They can not understand each other by their dialects thats why they speak ilocano to understand each other.
      We go In pangasinan. Their native dialect is pangasinense. And of course, tagalog and english.
      Go to pampanga. Ther dialect is kapampangan, and of course tagalog and english.
      And if u go to south same have different dialects aside from english and tagalog.
      Philippines has lot of dialects

    • @rittmeister3659
      @rittmeister3659 5 років тому +3

      @CQB RAPTOR I speak 4 languages and don't feel proud just because I do. am from Switzerland and as Swiss person by descent and blood, I am proud my country has won far more Nobel Prizes per capita than any other nation that collects Nobels on a regular basis, even when we don't consider all the foreign laureates living here & boasts the world's highest number of scientific publications per capita.
      Switzerland has the highest number of patents per capita, and is world leader in per capita R&D expenditure. We're among world's most sportive nations, collecting many more Olympic medals per capita than almost all other countries. How many Gold medals Swiss people won? Look it up!
      But we don't go around shouting to the world we're proud of this and proud of that. There is an essential need for humility in all that we do. But there seems to be an indication that those proud people are the most without achievements

    • @josh-yf8gv
      @josh-yf8gv 5 років тому

      Tu sais parler francais à comme moi, moi je suis filipin mais je suis née en France et je sais juste parler le Filipinos l anglais et le tagalog

    • @divinaotacan4746
      @divinaotacan4746 5 років тому +1

      @CQB RAPTOR It is very sad that someone like you who thinks so highly of yourself as “humble” and superior financially and intellectually could be so pathetically a racist and a bully. It is no wonder that the world we live in is a mess, with the kind of people like you.

    • @khakikohii
      @khakikohii 5 років тому

      @CQB RAPTOR actually we do have inventors here..but our government is so corrupt that they don't give a single fuck about innovations and research, that's why skilled Filipinos work abroad, and Filipino inventors sold their creations to other countries. I'm a Filipino but I wish we were never colonized by the Americans, and I wouldn't need to learn English. It sucks that we need to learn English to find jobs. Up to this day they also control our bias media just to bring their hypocritical propaganda.

  • @jcoruas8077
    @jcoruas8077 6 років тому +83

    "Two languages where speakers can understand each other are considered dialects of the same language, whereas two languages where the speakers cannot understand each other are, indeed, separate languages" - Marc Ettlinger, Ph.D., linguistics, UC-Berkeley

    • @deancafe4739
      @deancafe4739 3 роки тому +1

      100% correct.

    • @banggiitangirongbu-ang3538
      @banggiitangirongbu-ang3538 2 роки тому +1

      I'm Filipino, my native language is Cebuano/Bisaya. In that list, I can only understand/speak 3 languages. Yes they are all distinct languages.

    • @maldito8679
      @maldito8679 Рік тому

      Actually fake nmn tong listahan na'to tagalog manipulate the numbers para lumamang sila, ang taga palawan na madaming Cebuano/Bisaya hindi sinali sa bilang sa Cebuano/bisaya, pero dinagdag sa tagalog, pati sa southern Leyte Hindi binilang ih Cebuano/Bisaya nmn ang language na ginagamit ng mga tao dyan pati sa southern bicol (Masbate) Cebuano/Bisaya ang lenguahe nila dun di rin sinali sa counting sa Cebuano, at yung Marinduque na hindi nmn mga tagalog Ang tao dun sinama sa counting sa tagalog para lumamang ang bilang nila sa Cebuano. At madaming Cebuano/Bisaya sa manila at NCR kahit di na isali sa bilang yan sa Cebuano/Bisaya mas madami pa din Ang nag sasalita ng Cebuano sa totoo lang.

    • @Drego1702
      @Drego1702 Рік тому

      Thanks for this!!

  • @Shualiksik
    @Shualiksik 5 років тому +127

    andaming hindi nakakaalam kung ano pinagkaiba ng diyalekto sa wika. lahat ng nabanggit ay wika. yung diyalekto ay baryasyon ng wika na naiintindihan pa din ng kapwa nagsasalita nito bagamat magkaiba ang diyalekto.
    Halimbawa.
    1. Wikang Bicol ay may iba't ibang diyalekto.. may baryasyon nito sa Catanduanes, Albay at Sorsogon
    2. Ang Wikang Binisaya ay nagkakaroon ng baryasyong Boholano na bahagyang iba sa Cebuano. Ito'y mga diyalekto.
    3. Ang WikangTagalog ay ganun din. Bahagyang naiiba ang baryasyon ng Tagalog na nasa Maynila sa makalumang Tagalog ng Batangas. Nag-iiba sa bokabularyo ang mga Batangueño at paraan ng pananalita. Ang ginulo ay nagiging hinalukay, ang maghanda ay nagiging gumayak, ang umuulan ay nagiging naulan, ang kumakain ay nagiging nakain. Gayun din naman ang baryasyon ng Tagalog sa Marinduque. Bagaman naiiba ng kaunti ay nagkakaintindihan pa din ang mga kapwa nagtatagalog

    • @zignosband
      @zignosband 5 років тому +4

      Josh, I think you mean is ACCENT or PUNTO. Halimbawa ay American vs. British accent , Newyorker vs. Southern American accent. Ang wikang Filipino ay maraming dialect ngunit ang pambansang wika ay hango sa tagalog.

    • @pwat6311
      @pwat6311 5 років тому +4

      Philippines had 186 dialect

    • @bczloveofmylife9581
      @bczloveofmylife9581 5 років тому +2

      tama ka josh 😊

    • @zignosband
      @zignosband 5 років тому +6

      JOSH I got you point now LOL; Dialect, a variety of a language that signals where a person comes from. ... A dialect is chiefly distinguished from other dialects of the same language by features of linguistic structure-i.e., grammar (specifically morphology and syntax) and vocabulary.

    • @nurseaarai9279
      @nurseaarai9279 5 років тому +1

      Tama! Tumpak! Nakuha mo! 👏👏👏

  • @dardanillakaamino3352
    @dardanillakaamino3352 5 років тому +17

    Cebuano or Bisaya is widely spoken from most part of Minndanao,Central and Eastern Visayas.

  • @francess1767
    @francess1767 3 роки тому +9

    Proud Kapampangan Here
    Love from Mexico Pampanga 🥰

  • @HeronPHL
    @HeronPHL  6 років тому +262

    Chavacano is very intresting because it's the only spanish-based creole language in the Philippines. I wonder if it is easier for a native chavacano speaker to learn proper spanish. Any chavacano speakers here?

    • @thepinkprincess6827
      @thepinkprincess6827 6 років тому +14

      HeronPHL I'm a chavacano speaker

    • @daongchua7450
      @daongchua7450 6 років тому +18

      HeronPHL I’m a chavacano speaker and it is actually easier to learn English with your language being chavacano

    • @celestejohn
      @celestejohn 6 років тому +22

      i think chavacano is an ancient language during spanish colony

    • @markvergara5434
      @markvergara5434 6 років тому +60

      sana turo nila ulit spanish language para tri lingual na mga pinoy para astig aahaha..

    • @sheilatuano9633
      @sheilatuano9633 6 років тому +30

      Sayang, Spanish was taught in Colleges and Universities all over the Philippines before but it was removed in the curriculum in the 1990's.
      I can speak Cebuano-Visayan, Tagalog, English and a smattering of Spanish.

  • @HeronPHL
    @HeronPHL  6 років тому +10

    Help me reach 5k subs, guys! Please SUBSCRIBE! Thank you sm! 💖💕💖👍

  • @manuelfloresescobar7657
    @manuelfloresescobar7657 6 років тому +151

    I understood 90% of the Chavacano( I am from Spain)...I knew in Spain a Filipino who spoke Chavacano and Tagalo..well he learnt fluent spanish in few months! also many Tagalo words are similar in Spanish.

    • @migzgt4451
      @migzgt4451 6 років тому +3

      Manuel Flores Escobar Im A Filipino And All The Words We Says Is Spanish And Tagalog Mashup

    • @junelazuela7159
      @junelazuela7159 6 років тому +5

      corecto amigo..yo soy filipino.. estoy aqui vivo en la provincia Albay Phillipines..se como hablar spanish..y la palabra desnudo aqui nuestra provincia es aproxima damente 40% porcinto Spanish..y 60% porciento bikol..but im not chavacano..

    • @jaydel3
      @jaydel3 5 років тому +6

      @@migzgt4451 All the words? Stop spreading false information. Most adopted Spanish words are from the West like a Western Kitchen and Western animals or other Western things that doesn't directly translate. So many young Filipinos who are not knowledgeable tell Westerners that Tagalog/Filipino is like half Spanish when it's not. Quieres comer algo ahora porque tengo hambre. That is a simple Spanish question completely different from Filipino.

    • @spatsky
      @spatsky 5 років тому +3

      jaydel3
      I believe most of the Spanish spoken in the Media is largely based on Mexican Spanish. That’s my observation at least if watching or hearing anything Spanish.

    • @rochiledrumaguera285
      @rochiledrumaguera285 5 років тому +2

      Manuel Flores Escobar still have some laguages in the philippines like ybanag, itawes have similar words to spanish

  • @bencharz7592
    @bencharz7592 6 років тому +47

    Buenas noches na todo mio amigos y amigas aqui na entero mundo. Yo si Bench desde ciudad de Zamboanga, Pilipinas. Sabe yo conversa Chavacano. I just want to say something about the differences and similarities between Chavacano and Spanish. Most of the Chavacano words originated from Spanish. However they (Chavacano and Spanish) differ in terms of grammar. Spanish is conjugated, but Chavacano is not conjugated.
    For instance:
    Quiero comer platano. (Spanish)
    Quiere yo come saging. (Chavacano)
    I want to eat banana. (English)
    Now, take a look, the root word of "Quiero is querer (in Spanish), or (quiere in Chavacano). So, "yo" means "I" both in Spanish and Chavacano. Furthermore, "quiero" is a conjugated form of "querer and "yo" (in Spanish), or "quiere yo" (in Chavacano that is not conjugated) which means "I want".
    Continuously, there are Chavacano words which are not originated from Spanish such as "saging" (Tagalog), which means banana in English; "baulu" (Tausug's native cake), and there are also some words came from different languages like Visayan and English.
    According to John Chambers & Salvador Wee (2003) that many Spanish words are being dropped out by the new generation speakers and being replaced by Visayan, Tagalog, Tausug, etc. However, they produced an English-Chavacano Dictionary to make the Original Chavacano living and growing as one of the Filipino languages in the Philippines.
    Finally, about 90% of Chavacano words originated from Spanish yet not all Spanish words have Chavacano equivalent because Spanish has rich in vocabulary compared to Chavacano. Muchisimas gracias con vosotros... Dios te bendiga...

    • @robertgabuna355
      @robertgabuna355 5 років тому +3

      Thank you, Teacher...

    • @helcurtistheone459
      @helcurtistheone459 4 роки тому +3

      @- poppy - porke man hindi kame idiot grabe man bo doy 😭

    • @junecaratao4723
      @junecaratao4723 4 роки тому +1

      I prefer Spanish because it's nice to hear somebody speaking it. Chavacano sounds like Waray, not a romance language..but still important

    • @rhodium1096
      @rhodium1096 4 роки тому

      @Elksie English is Not from Filipinas and is oficial lenguage in Filipinas...

    • @ellefacts3502
      @ellefacts3502 3 роки тому

      Elksie Its a creole, you uncultured swine.

  • @markygonzales4589
    @markygonzales4589 6 років тому +64

    FYI , AKLAN IS NOT HILIGAYNON, ITS AKLANON , AND ANTIQuE IS KARAY-A

    • @hirofan
      @hirofan 6 років тому +3

      Marky Gonzales A lot of Tagalogs
      seem to lump all languages
      of Visayas together

    • @Andrewbuckzky
      @Andrewbuckzky 6 років тому +1

      True parekoy.... My father is ilonggo(Roxas city)...he just didn't teach us the language because my mother is ilocana...

    • @mingawlobo8646
      @mingawlobo8646 6 років тому +2

      Marky Gonzales True. also, there are different types of karay-a accents. Depending on which town or region in Anteque you live in.

    • @legendsareborninmarch4799
      @legendsareborninmarch4799 5 років тому +1

      Kon mag karay-a ka, indi ka nagid ka maintyendihan haw? May gamay lang nga distictinctions kag words but it is still hiligaynon.

    • @jaypeesaromines2446
      @jaypeesaromines2446 5 років тому +2

      Tama po, aklan is not hiligaynon, ung tawag sa salita nmin AKEANON,

  • @astraeusgodofthestars676
    @astraeusgodofthestars676 6 років тому +27

    I'm from Davao City, Philippines and my mother tongue is Bisaya-Bisaya gyud kong dako-in school they taught us English and Tagalog. Later, my interest in learning Spanish led me to learn also Chavacano- habla Español y Chavacano pero solo un poco... ;-) I hope I can also go, study, and live in Zamboanga City!

    • @vincebalucas5149
      @vincebalucas5149 5 років тому +2

      Hola amigo pilipino rin ako ilongo ako from davao

    • @Nj-xq6vw
      @Nj-xq6vw 4 роки тому

      pwde adto mo dri zamboanga city kay fiesta karon tibuok zamboanga, daghan kaayo mga activities, welcome kaayo mga bisita. chavacano pla ako d2 s zamboanga. dali ra mn tun an ang chavacano. hola! yo hablando chavacano aqui mi ciudad de zamboanga. ara dia ta celebra el hermosa festival, vene y celebra junto kanamon. vaya con dios!

  • @miguelotiscastillejos2162
    @miguelotiscastillejos2162 3 роки тому +14

    There are several varieties (dialects) of Ilocano, each having its own “ayug” (accent), pronunciation, and vocabulary.
    The Amianan (Northern) dialects, and Abagan (Southern) dialects,
    The Highland accent and Lowland accent, The Sweet pronunciation / accent, Hard pronunciation / accent and Neutral pronunciation / accent.

  • @eljn9998
    @eljn9998 6 років тому +148

    Los Filipinos que hablan Chavacano, tienen una gran oportunidad de aprender el Español al 100% pues casi todo lo que dijeron les entendí, Saludos desde México.

  • @eacio4548
    @eacio4548 3 роки тому +8

    As a fellow Filipino my mom and dad lived in the Philippines but moved to hawaii my mom speak IIocano while my dad maybe Tagalog but my mom is try to teach me how to speak IIocano. Because I only know how to speak English but I'm 11 years old now I'm willing learn other filipino languages:)🇵🇭

  • @aquariusmj9953
    @aquariusmj9953 6 років тому +12

    I am proud Cebuana here "Bisaya Language" Then learn how to speak in English, a little Spanish and a little Arabic here in Saudi Arabia.

  • @John-bh9nr
    @John-bh9nr 5 років тому +38

    Im not sure if the ranking is correct. Tagalog and English are in the top 2 because they are the mediums of instruction in school from Kindergarten onwards. If based on the number of native speakers, I think Cebuano, would probably rank #1 as it is the dominant language in 6 regions in Visayas and Mindanao, and has substantial number of speakers in two other regions.

    • @jaysanphillipcastro8267
      @jaysanphillipcastro8267 5 років тому +1

      True haskang pagkatinuora

    • @magbanuaamistadh3460
      @magbanuaamistadh3460 5 років тому +1

      Tama ka...karamihan nito ay nasa MINDANAO maraming bisaya sa mindanao kaysa sa Cebu

    • @volcarona.
      @volcarona. 5 років тому

      I think English would be first because everyone in the country can speak it, while the second one is Cebuano and third is Tagalog

    • @ralphlouiecruz392
      @ralphlouiecruz392 5 років тому +1

      Can you present factual figures?
      Mere assumption cannot be accepted as truth

    • @DalePaslon
      @DalePaslon 5 років тому +3

      @@ralphlouiecruz392 Why don't you do some research then. Mas marami ang cebuano/bisaya native speakers kaysa sa tagalog speakers. Heck sa skwelahan lang yan itinuturo and we don't actually use it on a daily basis.

  • @SuicideBunny6
    @SuicideBunny6 3 роки тому +15

    I was born on Mindanao, but moved to Europe as a baby. I've only recently tried learning some Filipino, and I was surprised to see how much all these languages actually differ! Still I can speak Dutch, English, French and a little German :)

  • @user-sv7wi2wu8p
    @user-sv7wi2wu8p 6 років тому +163

    I speak Tagalog because my mon is Filipina And I speak korean because my father is korean I can also speak English.
    My mother is Filipina from the province of Isabela so I know how to speak Ilocano
    My father also leaves in Gyeonggi do province of Korea and soon go to Seoul and so I know some Gyonggi do dialect.
    Overall I can speak
    Tagalog (Opo, marunong akong mag Tagalog)
    English (Aha, since I'm 9 yrs. Old)
    Korean (한극어)
    Ilocano (Wen ammuk ag Ilocano)
    Gyeongi Dialect (경기도)

  • @ernamadronamadrona
    @ernamadronamadrona 5 років тому +7

    I came from mindanao from caraga region i can speak Arabic, malay , I can speak mandarin, I can speak taiwanes, English but i love my language filipino language kahit anong mangyari walang makakapagbago sa sariling pambansang wika ko bilang filipina i am proud to be a filipina,,, happy new year to all

  • @Ahjumma1127
    @Ahjumma1127 4 роки тому +20

    Proud to be WARAYNON here~~♡♡

    • @jennifergonzales929
      @jennifergonzales929 Рік тому

      Karay a ako , marunong mag hiligaynon, Cebuano, ilocano,surigaonon, bicolano, tausog ,abaknon, madali ko mang maintindihan Ang waray waray

  • @mikilutz72
    @mikilutz72 3 роки тому +11

    based on my observation as a Tagalog speaker:
    Ilocano-fast speakers,
    Hiligaynon-Malambing..
    Bicolano-walang accent pag nagTagalog, buo.
    Kapampangan-(my 3rd language) may konting Spanish
    Waray-parang galit
    Cebuano-sarap sa Ears
    Chavacano-'sosyal' pakinggan
    Pangasinense-parang Ilocano

  • @marielledawn4358
    @marielledawn4358 6 років тому +19

    Thank you for calling the Pangasinan language Pangasinanse and not PangalaTOK. I truly appreciate it ✌🏽👌🏽👏🏽🙌🏽👍🏽

    • @alimmacala9586
      @alimmacala9586 5 років тому

      kulang sa survey,dapat sinama ang maranao na muslim,dahil lugar ng muslim ang philippines huhuhu

    • @larwinpadla7
      @larwinpadla7 5 років тому

      Yes ako rin, mas maganda pakinggan yung panggasinanse kesa panggalatok dba? Masantos ya kabwasan ed sika😊😊👍👍

    • @danieldeleon2815
      @danieldeleon2815 5 років тому

      Alexanders Corner pero tawag sa salita nmin na taga pangasinan is pangasinan din, not pangalatok or pangasinense. Pangasinense refers to us people of pangasinan

  • @rockyrainbow8742
    @rockyrainbow8742 5 років тому +13

    MY BELOVED COUNTRY PHILIPPINES HOW I MISS YOU SO MUCH!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @kginmyheart
    @kginmyheart 5 років тому +63

    I would rank English as number 1 because filipinos speak their dialects first paired with english so definitely a bigger percentage of filipinos are speaking english conversationally everyday.. Not everyone speaks tagalog everyday although everyone understands it.

    • @erzascarlet3895
      @erzascarlet3895 5 років тому +4

      You're wrong I'm a Filipina but maybe 60% of filipinos aren't good in english grammar that's the reality.

    • @kginmyheart
      @kginmyheart 5 років тому +12

      @@erzascarlet3895 i'm not talking about english fluency but percentage of filipinos who speak english on a daily basis. We can incorporate english words to any of our dialects not only tagalog because not all filipinos are tagalog speakers (taglish). Which means, english is used widely across the country conpared to tagalog. I hope I'm making sense.

    • @allzkolokoy8864
      @allzkolokoy8864 5 років тому +2

      Exactly. Only spoke tagalog once in my Filipino class when Filipino was still newly introduced during the Marcos dictatorship. My family also have cable-TV so my two sons, now in their teens, can't speak nor understand Filipino/tagalog.

    • @stylledog3851
      @stylledog3851 5 років тому +1

      @@erzascarlet3895 naka antique visayas ako at bihira lg marunong tagalog dito... mas marunong mag english kaya wag na umangal

    • @Eiji_Files
      @Eiji_Files 5 років тому +4

      @@erzascarlet3895 may point si kginmyheart. Kung magtravel ka sa iba't ibang sulok ng Pilipinas malalalaman mo. Minsan nga iinsultuhin ka pa kung bakit di ka marunong magEnglish o magsalita ng dialect ng probinsya na yun. Peksman, talagang mas bihasa ang karamihan sa English kesa sa Tagalog dito sa Pinas (lalo na ang Social climbers...hahaha)

  • @hubertlantajo6724
    @hubertlantajo6724 4 роки тому +12

    Bisaaya is the largest in the Philippines
    Most of Mindanao
    Central Visayas
    Parts of Eastern Visayas
    Parts of Palawan
    Parts of Quezon province in Luzon
    Parts of Masbate
    The second largest population is in Luzon

    • @boypalanyag2325
      @boypalanyag2325 2 роки тому +1

      Part of Quezon saan sa quezon e antindi ng tagalog dun

    • @boypalanyag2325
      @boypalanyag2325 2 роки тому +1

      Quezon province? Baka naman bisaya yung nagsasalita at narinig mo! Antindi ng accent ng tagalog quezon

    • @ofwcanadian
      @ofwcanadian 2 роки тому +1

      I went to Zambales and I found out that one of barangays in Masinloc are all Cebuano speakers.

    • @amilbuhay161
      @amilbuhay161 2 роки тому +1

      HAHAHAHAHA patawa ka quezon province mga tagalog tao dyan malalim nga gamit nila na tagalog dyan Hindi yan visaya,,,pati masbate Hindi visaya salita dyan may sariling language ang masbate at halong tagalog,,,pati palawan halo ang salita dyan kaya nga nag pasakop yan sa Luzon eh,,,,

    • @boypalanyag2325
      @boypalanyag2325 2 роки тому

      @@ofwcanadian ha? Patawa ka ba! Sinusumpa nga mga bisaya sa zambales e 3 lang salita dun ilokano, sambal at majority tagalog

  • @vincentryanborres
    @vincentryanborres 6 років тому +3

    I liked your video. #5 hiligaynon here from Capiz. I subbed by the way. Awesome!!!

    • @spatsky
      @spatsky 5 років тому

      vincent ryan borres
      I thought they also spoke Aklanon or
      Karay-a in Capiz.
      Come on. Tell the people what you really speak!

  • @maverickkillmore2996
    @maverickkillmore2996 4 роки тому +22

    The cebuano example is way too conyo.

    • @emmanuel2333
      @emmanuel2333 3 роки тому +5

      Yes, that is Davao bisaya or urban cebu bisaya..

  • @smileyjason3035
    @smileyjason3035 5 років тому +9

    When it comes to number of speaker in Ilokano the whole Region 1,Car, 2 and northern Region 3 speaks Ilokano.

  • @tobyrandall2826
    @tobyrandall2826 6 років тому +35

    soy de México, y la gente chavacano habla un poco español, no es español en realidad está roto español. Realmente no entiendo la mayor parte y usan algunas palabras en español de forma incorrecta🤔 pero me encantaría visitar zamboanga😍

  • @HeronPHL
    @HeronPHL  6 років тому +9

    *What language do they speak in Baguio! Watch my BAGUIO CITY VLOG! My FIRST VLOG ever!*
    *Link:* ua-cam.com/video/vT--wGKIJWM/v-deo.html

  • @nildaochea6590
    @nildaochea6590 5 років тому +5

    Thanks for sharing this video!😇

  • @bencharz7592
    @bencharz7592 6 років тому +5

    I am a Tausug from Zamboanga City. I can speak Tausug, Sama, Tagalog, Chavacano, Visayan, and American English. However, among the six languages in the Philippines that I know how, Chavacano is my favorite... El Chavacano es mio favorito por causa bien vale ta oi y tiene un poquito Espanol/Spanish. Saludos des de Ciudad de Zamboanga. Muchisimas Gracias!

    • @jimrommelviovicente8246
      @jimrommelviovicente8246 5 років тому

      Bench Arz Bad, bang makaabot ka ha lugar namo (BUTUAN CITY), malipay guid kaw to discover nga ang linitokan hong kamaas maasan namo, is very similar in your native tongue tausug...bang sadja awun ku daran kabissara, marahi mafluent ko isab magtausug....

  • @fohxtroht5784
    @fohxtroht5784 5 років тому +15

    Did you know that even in mindanao theres a lot of ilokano speakers in mindanao specefically in sultan kudarat in southern cotabato.

    • @fohxtroht5784
      @fohxtroht5784 5 років тому +3

      They came from luzon and migrated in mindanao.

    • @medtech9018
      @medtech9018 5 років тому

      tru, someone told me that there's a lot of ilocano speakers in their area.

    • @patriciopagas6966
      @patriciopagas6966 4 роки тому +2

      Yes but its minority,,, bisaya is the major language in mindanao

    • @senorswordfish6019
      @senorswordfish6019 4 роки тому +1

      @@patriciopagas6966 And Ilonggos. As an Ilonggo speaker from South Cot., I can say that Mindanao as a whole is a melting pot of languages and culture.

    • @nero2440
      @nero2440 3 роки тому +2

      I'm from mindanao and I haven't heard Ilocano there?

  • @bem_bemalicaya2091
    @bem_bemalicaya2091 4 роки тому +7

    My mom is pure ilongga born in south Cotabato. My dad is pure ilonggo born in North Cotabato. But currently live here Davao where it's bisaya 😂

    • @user-mz3cg3yn6j
      @user-mz3cg3yn6j 9 місяців тому

      You must speak Ilonggo dont be influenced by there language. In history Ilonggo is the original visaya panay Island represent one star in our flag

  • @listenwithme1818
    @listenwithme1818 5 років тому +7

    This is my first time to here that Ilocano was spoken in Hawaii

  • @JoyOfMia
    @JoyOfMia 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for the feature ❤️

  • @miguelotiscastillejos2162
    @miguelotiscastillejos2162 3 роки тому +5

    LOUD & PROUD TO BE AN ILOCANO 🤟🏼✨

  • @Nik-qb6rz
    @Nik-qb6rz 6 років тому +3

    Muchas gracias! It's good that Chavacano is in the list. A native speaker here. ❤

  • @vincetheworldly537
    @vincetheworldly537 6 років тому +5

    Hehe, I'm from Pangasinan and I speak the language. It's just quite sad that our language isn't that much represented in this vid in terms of the sample video language content, but I like how the overall content was standardized and organized. So I just thought, Pangasinan youtubers where art thou? Haha.

  • @whitedragon1355
    @whitedragon1355 5 років тому +4

    Dialects:
    Australian English
    American English
    British English
    These are dialects because Australians are still able to undestand American English. Same can be said for Americans understanding Australian English.
    If you can’t understand a language then that’s what makes it a different language no matter how much similarities they have.
    I speak Bicol, Tagalog, and English and I could tell that Tagalog speakers can’t understand Bicol. There can be a lot of differences!
    Tagalog: “Mas mabilis kaya akong tumakbo kaysa sa’yo”
    Bicol: “Mas marabas akong magdalagan kaysa sa imo.
    There’s some similarities but you can’t really understand them.
    Bicol and Bisaya or the others however have dialects in close cities or areas. Meaning that places or towns about 20 miles away from you may still be speaking the same language, there might be some slight differences but you are still able to understand them.
    Philippines can be complicated when it comes to languages, but they can be easy to learn if you know how to speak Tagalog or any languages from the country. 😉

  • @elprincep582
    @elprincep582 5 років тому +5

    I am a FILIPINO
    I speak my native language is Ilocano
    But I also speak Tagalog, English
    And Spanish
    Diversity all in one 😊

    • @iTzRyderCA
      @iTzRyderCA 5 років тому

      dita dennam awan nagbasolak 😍

  • @habibkareem5506
    @habibkareem5506 6 років тому +44

    i am so happy you included chavacano... i love my language (yeah it is a language not just a dialect)

    • @lhynbtsweareoneexolconcepc4906
      @lhynbtsweareoneexolconcepc4906 6 років тому

      Habib Nanan me to.

    • @lhynbtsweareoneexolconcepc4906
      @lhynbtsweareoneexolconcepc4906 6 років тому +1

      Habib Nanan me to.

    • @chex2herrera162
      @chex2herrera162 6 років тому +2

      Chavacano is not a language lol...its a dialect. the only language of Philippines is tagalog/pilipino...

    • @lionhearted1969
      @lionhearted1969 6 років тому +5

      @Chex2...study some more. You must be a kid, so get your education before you join in the discussion. The Philippines has more than a hundred languages. Our national language has been Filipino and it is Tagalog based language because the one who proposed it as our national language was also a Tagalog, the late President Manuel L. Quezon. If he were not Tagalog, I'm sure our national language wouldn't be based in Tagalog. Today, there are two dominant languages spoken in the Philippines: Tagalog with 26 million speakers and Cebuano with 21 million. There are 12 other languages whose speakers number between one million to 7 million.

    • @lionhearted1969
      @lionhearted1969 6 років тому +3

      Yes, Chavacano is not a native language. It's a creole language, meaning, its symantics, grammatical structures, lexicon all come from other languages. In the case of Chavacano, its lexicon come from Cebuano, Tagalog, Spanish, Hiligaynon, etc. while its grammatical structures are very similar to other Philippine languages, rather than Spanish. A native Spanish speaker may understand a Chavacano speaker but they won't be able to talk smoothly as their structures are different.

  • @MrDraculadave
    @MrDraculadave 6 років тому +17

    My main language is hiligaynon.. I learn Filipino and English at school... bisaya by my friends, a little bit Spanish at home and Arabic abroad..
    Wala Lang share ko Lang..

    • @mylove_78
      @mylove_78 6 років тому

      LeoDave ليو حبيبي Divino whether cebuano, hiligaynon, waray2x etc. ang language ng isang tao, when you are living visayas region you are visayan.

    • @jocelynsebuan1561
      @jocelynsebuan1561 6 років тому +1

      language is pangkalahatan kaya tagalog. is our language ..dialect kung saang probinsya ka galing like ako iloilo kaya hiligaynon dialect namon. ..

    • @philanguagetv9958
      @philanguagetv9958 6 років тому +1

      My main language is kinaray-a,
      I also speak Ilonggo,Filipino,Tagalog and English,a little bit spanish im ilonggo btw . Wala share ko lng man😊hola soy ivan, yo hablo español pero un poco solo lol..

    • @lorenzosebastiancubillan2263
      @lorenzosebastiancubillan2263 6 років тому

      LeoDave ليو حبيبي Divino a

    • @moviemania1583
      @moviemania1583 6 років тому

      Jocelyn Sebuan kahit sa probinsya ka pa language or wika parin tawag dya...tulad hiligaynon,waray, cebuano,bicolano

  • @ladyjammirgalapin8348
    @ladyjammirgalapin8348 5 років тому +9

    Proud to be bisaya!❤❤😍

    • @richmondlandersenfells2238
      @richmondlandersenfells2238 2 роки тому

      My father was from eastern visayas but he keeps it to himself. I don't know why but i respect him still. I never even knew it until i was twenty!

  • @junahexhenodiala4540
    @junahexhenodiala4540 3 роки тому +4

    Marami talaga ang bisaya sa mindanao at sa visayas

    • @rogertorillo7148
      @rogertorillo7148 3 роки тому

      Bisaya o cebuano speak sa visayas: leyte, bohol, cebu, siquijor, negros occidental og negros oriental..

    • @junahexhenodiala4540
      @junahexhenodiala4540 3 роки тому +1

      @@rogertorillo7148 halos mindanao sakop ng bisaya

  • @olliepaulino8572
    @olliepaulino8572 6 років тому +69

    Chavacano is my lingua franca. No debia considera como ordinario dialecto el lenguage del mi ciudad de Zamboanga. Unico latino ciudad de Asia. Gracias.

    • @rauloliveira8320
      @rauloliveira8320 6 років тому +7

      Sin Duda. I am Portuguese and speak Spanish too. Yo entiendo tudo lo que usted ha dicho.

    • @bmona7550
      @bmona7550 6 років тому

      Ollie Paulino Good thing I studied Spanish XD

    • @lionhearted1969
      @lionhearted1969 6 років тому +5

      Chavacano is a creole language, not a native language. Creole language meaning, it's developed on purpose to create their own and through constant use over time, has become distinct from other languages where its lexicon are derived from. A creole language is like a hodge-podge or mixture of different words that no native words of its own. In Chavacano lexicon, all words come from different languages like Tagalog, Cebuano, Spanish, Hiligaynon, etc. Chavacano follows the same grammatical structures of other Philippine languages rather than Spanish. In essence, Chavacano is a Filipino dialect not a Spanish dialect. It may sound Spanish to some due to the use of many Spanish words but it is actually a creole language based on Spanish in terms of words but use the syntax common to many Philippine languages.

    • @reyreyes7597
      @reyreyes7597 6 років тому

      Bien ondo gayot de oste palabra de chavacan hehe.. De onde oste?

    • @al-azizhairunsahid589
      @al-azizhairunsahid589 6 років тому

      Ollie Paulino muy bien

  • @floristasflorafauna5037
    @floristasflorafauna5037 6 років тому +14

    There are many more dialects in the Philippines. You can perhaps go to Cordillera and learn the different tribal dialects. Mindanao also has different tribal dialects. More power.

    • @yoomilee4629
      @yoomilee4629 6 років тому

      Floristas Flora Fauna true I'm from Cordillera and every municipality has their own uNique dialect but we usually speak iloko to understand each other.

    • @shinixhiconan9570
      @shinixhiconan9570 6 років тому +1

      True.. We have kankanaey,ibaloi,kalanguya,ilocano and etc..

    • @unniekimyubin213
      @unniekimyubin213 6 років тому

      It's not about power it's about frequency and popularity

    • @worldwidealientae_jin1750
      @worldwidealientae_jin1750 6 років тому

      oo taga Ifugao po ako

    • @joearc672
      @joearc672 6 років тому

      Ang sabi top 10...kaya hindi nasali sa iba..kukonti lang cguro gumagamit..

  • @sanemikamdo7376
    @sanemikamdo7376 4 роки тому +1

    Maraming salamat sa pagkuha ng impormasyon

  • @joysjose2041
    @joysjose2041 5 років тому +16

    Nice video... Thanks for the information... Love from Kerala, India... ( But I am in Dubai now )

  • @abubakarbagumbayan5423
    @abubakarbagumbayan5423 5 років тому +8

    illonggo tlga pinaka magandang accent napaka lambing proud to be illonggo

    • @peacekeeper1924
      @peacekeeper1924 2 роки тому

      mga putong...!

    • @jennifergonzales929
      @jennifergonzales929 Рік тому

      @@peacekeeper1924 Anong klasing ilonggo karay a o hiligaynon, kasi kaming mga karay a di kami malambing magsalita para kaming nagagalit iba kami sa mga taga capiz

  • @shenboi
    @shenboi 6 років тому +11

    Bakit ang daming comments na komokontra sa video na to. Tama naman po ung title. Kaya nga tayo may National Language, kasi marami tayong ibat-ibang language.

    • @damijo2657
      @damijo2657 5 років тому

      Languages are english spanish french etc cebuano hiligaynon chavacani are dialects spoken in different regions or provinces in the phillipines

    • @erysnorman27phils91
      @erysnorman27phils91 5 років тому +7

      Dami Jo
      If speakers of the two speech varieties can have a conversation and understand each other, they are using “dialects” of a single language. In contrast, if speakers of the two speech varieties converse and do not understand each other, they are using two distinct languages. This criterion is called mutual intelligibility. In this criterion, Cebuano, Ilocano, Masbatenyo, Waray, among others, are languages and not merely dialects. On the other hand, the Tagalog varieties spoken in Batangas, Rizal, and other southern Tagalog areas are dialects of the Tagalog language.

  • @smartITworks4me
    @smartITworks4me 4 роки тому +1

    I like this vid. It is very informative..

  • @lionelmathewmatuguina4778
    @lionelmathewmatuguina4778 5 років тому +15

    Me cebuano or bisaya
    Proud ko nga bisaya ko taga leyte ko

    • @yesme2422
      @yesme2422 4 роки тому +1

      lionel Mathew Matuguina I’m pretty sure Tagalog people can’t understand you but you can understand Tagalog? Right?

    • @bashstampede4324
      @bashstampede4324 4 роки тому

      ​@@yesme2422 yass!!

  • @japanesefilipinorinsan
    @japanesefilipinorinsan 6 років тому +142

    I speak Tagalog, Bisaya, English and Japanese

  • @paulotv4247
    @paulotv4247 6 років тому +16

    The difference of language and dialect depends on which book you follow. In fact, there is no single fact of how dialects exist in linguistic approach.
    Opinion: We all came from a much lesser group of people, which speak lesser amount of language and vocabulary as to compare today. As we spread around the world, so as our language differs from the other. Changes in language happen due to geographic, political, socioeconomic, security, physical capability (inclusion of sign language) and other factors. It all happens through time.
    As unlimited and diverse as the universe, so is our way of communication.
    Now that the era of computers are here, humans also tend to create languages for machines to understand.
    Opinion:Opinion:Opinion:
    So to compare dialect vs language. We have to sight 1 base language in order to come up with its "dialects" (variants).
    Examples - Language (dialects):
    -English (American, British)
    -American (Southern, Eastern)
    -Filipino (Tagalog, Visayan)
    -Tagalog (Bulacan, Batangas)
    -Visayan (Cebu, Davao)
    -Chinese (Mandarin, Cantonese)
    -Spanish (Mexican, Spain)
    and so on...
    More Opinions:
    We also noticed that North Korean stuck to the old vocabulary which is now different to the modernized South Korean language, due to politics and social advancements.
    Also as a programmer, I knew some of these examples:
    -Software (Visual Basic, C)
    -Database (MariaDB, MySQL)
    -OS (Unix, DOS)
    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @joypadernal5346
      @joypadernal5346 5 років тому

      Paulo de Leon
      D yan language it is called dialect
      Number one spoken language in the in the pinas
      1. Tagalog
      2.english
      3. Spanish
      4. Chinese

  • @michelles.launio3438
    @michelles.launio3438 5 років тому +4

    Yes! Hiligaynon, south cotabato here!

    • @marcoatienza8884
      @marcoatienza8884 4 роки тому +1

      South Cotabato represent!!!! Proud Ilonggo, Bisaya, Tagalog, English-speaker here.

  • @Natalia-hf3et
    @Natalia-hf3et 4 роки тому

    Loved the video

  • @TheSocioPat7786
    @TheSocioPat7786 5 років тому +3

    And sprinkled in all the dialects of the Philippines is Spanish. 400 years of Spanish rule has made a huge impact on Philippine culture and language. Traditions as well. The Philippines and Mexico are very similar countries in my opinion.

    • @jonilioazuela8400
      @jonilioazuela8400 4 роки тому +1

      Lo se.. Soy de filipino
      .Gracias Amigo..Y Saludos desde Filipinas..🇵🇭❤

  • @kendrickmorales331
    @kendrickmorales331 6 років тому +3

    Any language they speak in Philippines. I love that country is so beautiful place

  • @karmanluna2695
    @karmanluna2695 5 років тому +9

    Chavacano the Best!!

  • @kevaran1422
    @kevaran1422 6 років тому +59

    A lot of peole keep saying these are Philippine dialects, where in fact these are Philippine languages!

    • @lezcil
      @lezcil 6 років тому +2

      I think ur history teachers or Filipino teachers would be quite disappointed about this. 😐

    • @kevaran1422
      @kevaran1422 6 років тому +13

      Lezcil Ingking they wouldn't be, cuz they themselves even got it wrong. The books got it wrong this whole time. The problem was I believed them until I got into college where things got cleared by linguistics class. Have you been in a linguistics class btw?

    • @lezcil
      @lezcil 6 років тому +1

      Nikos Elizondo really???? I won't passed PRC examination without linguistis. I can speak foreign basic language other than English and Filipino. And can even identify their different dialects. Di lang ang pilipinas ang may isang dialect, lahat na bansa may isa o higit pa na language na ginagamit at may ibat-ibang dialects na nakapaloob nito.

    • @kevaran1422
      @kevaran1422 6 років тому +2

      Lezcil Ingking okay, sounds awesome, you might get interested to read this one: blog.senti.com.ph/the-philippine-linguistic-situation-18a69f14a1b7

    • @kevaran1422
      @kevaran1422 6 років тому +1

      Lezcil Ingking anyhow, it's not always easy to compare philppines to other countries since every state has their own linguistic situation. It's like comparing apple to a banana. But that was good try though, I appreciate that.

  • @bamixfernan1
    @bamixfernan1 5 років тому +15

    Tingog namo mga cebuano/bisaya :D lol

  • @kashireal01
    @kashireal01 5 років тому +1

    I Love this I am Kashi and my parents are from Visayas particularly Negros that speaks visayan languages such as Hiligaynon and Cebuano, I grew up in the south of Metro Manila, I speak fluently 5 languages including my 2 mother tongues Tagalog (Filipino), and Hiligaynon (Ilonggo), and my Academic and career language as English and I am fluent in Cebuano, and Spanish (Particularly Philippine Spanish) not the Chavacano one but the Castellano / Español. Another as well not I included on my 5 languages, I can speak Sanskrit as a liturgical language as I was practicing spiritual yoga before.

  • @senorswordfish6019
    @senorswordfish6019 4 роки тому +2

    Proud Ilonggo here who can speak Hiligaynon, Cebuano, Tagalog, English, Spanish, and Ilocano (a bit).

  • @darkomenjinx8497
    @darkomenjinx8497 6 років тому +12

    You missed the point in hiligaynon we may be a branch of hiligaynon but 4 provinces speaks different dialects..ILOILO speaks ilonggo(can both referring to their dialects or its people),Aklan speaks akyeanon more Ae Ea Ei sounds(my friend tough me but I gave up on them it's difficult to pronounce it if you are not a native from aklan),Antique speaks Kinaray-a(our dialects have so much letter R and some words may be different from town to town like sayod,kado,lapot,pigaw which only one meaning,poor quality or bad quality),however I cannot say for Capiz if they have their own dialect branched out from hiligaynon 😁😊

    • @zalaguinto9670
      @zalaguinto9670 6 років тому +1

      Aries Crespo Tumangday tama kat ing karun... du capiz hay hiligaynon man dun....

    • @clustervideos279
      @clustervideos279 6 років тому +3

      Cebuano rin maraming dialects Ex. Cebuano sa Cebu, Northern Kana sa Leyte, Southern Kana sa S.Leyte, Bol-anon sa Bohol, Porohanon sa Poro, at marami pang iba sa Mindanao at sa Visayas........isearch mo na lang sa wikipedia........

    • @FreysViewpoint
      @FreysViewpoint 6 років тому

      They are all grouped as Ilonggo/Hiligaynon

    • @rhianmarieroselopez1848
      @rhianmarieroselopez1848 6 років тому

      Hiligaynon/ ilonggo rin ang salita ng capiz.
      Peru my sarili kaming punto d tulad ng iloilo at bacolod.

    • @kristinecepe7758
      @kristinecepe7758 6 років тому

      Marunong ako magsalita ng karay.a(Antiqueños dialect) hayop gumawa neto ambobo..

  • @lelouchv.britannia92
    @lelouchv.britannia92 6 років тому +24

    Bicolano ako...
    Dios mabalos sa imo na naggibo kaining video, hehehe,,
    Go go go bicolano!!!

  • @ma.andreamorillo6279
    @ma.andreamorillo6279 Рік тому +1

    I'm from Antique, and though we can understand and speak Hiligaynon, we have our own distinct language called Kinaray-a/Karay-a which is also similar to Hiligaynon but have a stronger accent and some word differences. Some towns in the southern portion have a similar accent to Hiligaynon, Towns in the northern part have similarities to Aklanon and the standard kinaray-a speakers are in the Capital town of Antique and other nearby towns.

  • @reyjuario6043
    @reyjuario6043 6 років тому +1

    Bisaya is spoken in some areas in luzon and many areas in visayas and mindanao. I believe it is the most spoken language in the philippines.

  • @AbdulMontaquimBPacod
    @AbdulMontaquimBPacod 6 років тому +28

    I can speak Ilokano, Ilonggo, Maguindanaon, bisaya, Tagalog tausog and also my own mother tounge M'ranáo.

    • @ZiyadABDULLAH20
      @ZiyadABDULLAH20 5 років тому

      +maharlika rajah I am Maranao and Our languagr can called M’ranao as long as how we pronounce it.😄

    • @ZiyadABDULLAH20
      @ZiyadABDULLAH20 5 років тому

      +maharlika rajah I am Maranao, our language can call M’ranao as long as how we pronounce it.🎶😄

    • @nicolaikuchiv6625
      @nicolaikuchiv6625 5 років тому

      my mother tongue is bicol dialect and i speak tagalog,english,russian,arabic,japanese,spanish and (60%) chinese mandarin

    • @robertgabuna355
      @robertgabuna355 5 років тому

      Polyglot, eh?

    • @robertgabuna355
      @robertgabuna355 5 років тому

      @@maharlikarajah2675
      spelling police...

  • @ralfmanajero896
    @ralfmanajero896 6 років тому +46

    Im from Iloilo, Hiligaynon/ilonggo ang laguage namon. Malalambing talaga mag salita mga taga iloilo thats why Tinawag na city of Love. Basta mga ilonggo ma pinalanggaon ma buot kag maatipanon gid na yah! 😘

    • @joeygonzo
      @joeygonzo 6 років тому +2

      Yup. Also spoken in some parts of Mindanao because a lot of Ilonggos moved there to open businesses. My late great grandfather opened a logging company in Malaybalay and it expanded all the way to Davao del Norte and Agusan. Hence, he spread the Ilonggo dialect there. But, the sound is not quite as pronounced as in Iloilo and Bacolod. Manny and Jinkee Pacquiao speak Ilonggo. So does MJ Lastimosa and Manny Pinol. Even though they are all from Mindanao originally.

    • @emzadventuresgaming
      @emzadventuresgaming 6 років тому +2

      Ralfie Apistar hahaha, sakto ka guid, kung ang bisaya pa pahambalun ang mga ilonggo kunu kung mangakig daw ga lambing lng gihapun...hehe

    • @marionpelias652
      @marionpelias652 6 років тому +11

      Emz Yheanne malambing ang tuno pero ga rulupad ang kaldero.. hahaha

    • @emzadventuresgaming
      @emzadventuresgaming 6 років тому +1

      Marion Pelias hahaha, amu na ang tsakto nga malambing...😂😂😂😂 Brutal nga lambing

    • @marionpelias652
      @marionpelias652 6 років тому +3

      Emz Yheanne careño brutal kng si lolo ko pa pahambalon.. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @ult7511
    @ult7511 5 років тому +1

    If we got no english today i think Tagalog and Bisaya are the official language today. We can add Ilocano in it coz north luzon is predominantly using Ilokano in their region. I speak Tagalog and English sadly i can't speak Aklanon and Ilokano coz my parents didn't pass the language to us but i really appreciate our languages, it makes us unique and cool.

    • @instantinople3796
      @instantinople3796 3 роки тому

      Nah. It would be Spanish and whatever dialect there is.

  • @paulaujero3998
    @paulaujero3998 4 роки тому +5

    Iba talaga accent ng ilonggo/hiligaynon kasi parang hindi kami galit mag salita hahah

  • @jonathanmelchor1199
    @jonathanmelchor1199 5 років тому +10

    what about kankanaey/igorot..
    proud to be a Igorot /Filipino....

  • @Hardmanferdead
    @Hardmanferdead 5 років тому +3

    I started learning Tagalog about a year ago, though do like the sound of the other major Filipino languages.

    • @hirofan
      @hirofan 4 роки тому

      I noticed the way Ilonggos
      talk sounds like they're singing sometimes

    • @deancafe4739
      @deancafe4739 3 роки тому

      Indeed.. Tagalog is like the most boring, most bland language of the philippines.

  • @jhaymanaloto019
    @jhaymanaloto019 5 років тому +2

    kapampangan aq ngagandahan tlga aq s language n chavacano gandang pakinggan parang hawig s spanish nkkaingit.

  • @chino2kill
    @chino2kill 4 роки тому

    very informative video

  • @thornados4969
    @thornados4969 6 років тому +3

    English is still the number one language spoken. It is taught in schools from day one all over the Philippines. Next is bisaya, a language spoken in visayas and mindanao. The third is tagalog , the spoken language of manila and neighboring areas. Ilokano is spoken in northern luzon while bikolano is in souther luzon.

  • @absisfabs873
    @absisfabs873 6 років тому +9

    Chavacano now is a language. We consider it our language, not yours but ours. So stop telling us its not a language. It is our language. It is the only thing with romance language imfluence.

    • @kuiawei
      @kuiawei 6 років тому +2

      Albino Natividad that is dialect In the Philippines.

    • @joearc672
      @joearc672 6 років тому

      Gago!!!bukod na pala kayo sa pilipinas!!! Saan kaba gumala ng tinuro sainyo ng guro nyo.... balik ka sa hi skul...

    • @junelazuela7159
      @junelazuela7159 6 років тому

      so true..dating bational langguage ang spañol dito sa pinas sabi ng lolo ko till 1940..dumating kasi ang kano at tinanggal ang lenguheng Spañol..

    • @lbee8158
      @lbee8158 6 років тому

      Filipino language derived from all languages in the Philippines such as Bisaya, Chavacano, Ilocano, chavacano etc Tagalog is just one of the Filipino languages .. don’t tell me that only tagalog considered as Filipino. dont be so bobo wilmer

  • @peytqt225
    @peytqt225 5 років тому +1

    Nakakaamaze pala tayong mga Pilipino ang dami nating dialects. Sana matutunan ko ket mga 3

  • @TYGVlogger
    @TYGVlogger 3 роки тому +2

    I’m don’t even speak Chavacano but because of Spanish I understood everything ahhaha
    Mine are Hiligaynon(from my dad, Iloilo)and Caraya(my mum, from San Joaquinan a province that is an hour away from Iloilo))

    • @TYGVlogger
      @TYGVlogger 3 роки тому

      I have a friend who’s also from Roax City

  • @hilarymanuel
    @hilarymanuel 6 років тому +3

    Except for the northern languages enumerated and I can speak or understand all of them. My parents used to speak Waray, we are in Bicol, I grew up speaking Hilayganon/Illongo and later Cebuano and I became fluent in both. Since I speak Spanish as well, written Chavacano is not so much a problem because the grammatical structure and vocabulary is not foreign to me at all. Also not mentioned - Masbateno my second language and my first is a dialect of that. My Illonggo also is a dialect and not pure Illonggo. I was exposed to Boholano as well but that one was completely forgoten in my mind.

    • @jimrommelviovicente8246
      @jimrommelviovicente8246 5 років тому

      Hilary Manuel...Maogmahon akong nadangog ini gabos saimo Noy. Bicol es el primer dialecto que aprendo. Passion ko lang gid maghambal sang lain nga tinaga. Garo ngani dai sinda magtubod sakuya kung moingon ko nga pure bisaya ko..Todavia estoy triste, diri ko fluent mag waray...I speak ilocano and kapampangan as well...

    • @richmondlandersenfells2238
      @richmondlandersenfells2238 2 роки тому +1

      My father is from eastern visayas. He never told me until i was twenty. I swear, that i will learn to speak bisayan dialect one day!

  • @shannel497
    @shannel497 5 років тому +13

    I speak tagalog,english,bisaya,hiligaynon and japanese

  • @jikooktaeginamjintaekookyo6666
    @jikooktaeginamjintaekookyo6666 4 роки тому +1

    Proud bisaya here daghang salamat sa videong ini

    • @budzlight6888
      @budzlight6888 4 роки тому

      Kita ang pinaka daghan nga ethnicity sa Pilipinas ug pina ka daghan mo estoryag bisaya.

  • @rafaaldeguer3642
    @rafaaldeguer3642 5 років тому +2

    I wish they would bring back the spanish language in our curriculum. Technically, spanish was suppose to be the official language of the Philippines. I speak a little because my grandparents are fluent and I am deeply saddened that a lot of Filipinos today are either not aware that Filipinos before spoke spanish or just don't like or are completely ignorant towards it. I've learned to appreciate and love the language. Amongst all 22 countries that Spain had colonized, we are the only country that had forgotten the spanish language. Hope it is taught again and spread throughout the nation again one day.

    • @HeronPHL
      @HeronPHL  5 років тому

      Ikr

    • @uglygoblin2413
      @uglygoblin2413 2 роки тому

      Yeah and those 22 countries, their indigenous languages are dying/dead. We should be grateful that we speak languages of our own. And spanish has no practicality in The Philippines

  • @jancegamodia4067
    @jancegamodia4067 5 років тому +3

    Proud to be ilocano and bicolano

  • @floridaaguada4216
    @floridaaguada4216 6 років тому +34

    I'm pure ilokano from Pasuquin.i can speak bit ilonggo.tagalog is easy to learn. the rest dialect i cant understand😊

    • @May-du5dp
      @May-du5dp 6 років тому +2

      florida aguada but we ilonggos speak hiligaynon, not ilonggo

    • @jhowiesalvado1205
      @jhowiesalvado1205 6 років тому

      florida aguada Ayan mo pasuquin? Pasuquin nak met.

    • @bluemarshall6180
      @bluemarshall6180 6 років тому

      florida aguada , I Used to Spend my Summer Vacation at Pasuquin.

    • @ricobayya1567
      @ricobayya1567 6 років тому

      Im from vintar

    • @texbacalian5036
      @texbacalian5036 6 років тому +1

      Ilonggo is a person from Iloilo and the language spoken by the Ilonggos is Hiligaynon.

  • @gregbalberan3369
    @gregbalberan3369 4 роки тому +2

    I remember opening a random page of the phone directory and chanced on listings of Lim which went on for pages and pages and pages. I wonder about the ranking of Chinese since there are many Chinese-Filipinos.

    • @satanggukie3456
      @satanggukie3456 4 роки тому

      Most likely Hokkien is first because most of FilChi are from South East China... next is mandarin

  • @frecyjane9936
    @frecyjane9936 5 років тому +2

    Spanish
    Taglish
    English
    Tagalog
    Cebuano/Bisaya
    Ilonggo/hiligaynon
    Waray
    and also we never notice that we speak our dialects theres a mix of Malay, Indonesian language,bicol Japanese and Chinese.
    Kung sa Tagalog, kami mga pinoy halo2 lenguahe namin d namin alam na may words kami sinasabi pero ibang lenguahe na pala yun sa ibang bansa.

  • @gramirez72
    @gramirez72 6 років тому +5

    The socio-linguistic geography of the Philippines is so interesting, and so diverse and complex. I wonder if Quezon should've also included Visaya as one of the official languages, along with Tagalog, English and Spanish (Spanish until the 1970s of course).
    Maybe having three levels of official languages could have been structured: 1. Tagalog and Visaya. 2. Your regional/provincial dialect. 3. English and/or Spanish.
    Or... 1. Tagalog, English. 2. Visaya, Spanish. 3. Regional/provincial dialect/language.
    Despite all the major languages, Tagalog and Visaya are the most widely spoken, each one a kind of 'binding' or common language within its respective region -- north and south. When traveling from province to province in Luzon, Tagalog can easily be the common form of communication between two different speakers. The same when going from island to island in the Visayas, Visaya/Cebuano is more or less the 'go to' language.

  • @Captain_Egg
    @Captain_Egg 2 роки тому +3

    I can speak 4 of these languages I can speak Chavacano, a little bit of tagalog, english, and mainly Bisaya

  • @kwek2243
    @kwek2243 3 роки тому +2

    Cebuano is the second most popular language in Philippines. all muslim knows how to speak bisaya in mindanao and in Visayas.... most knows how to speak bisaya as a second language besides their mother ethnic tongue.

    • @fredylenlobo313
      @fredylenlobo313 3 роки тому

      not 2nd but first visayas and mindanao spoke visayan langauage

  • @tessgarcia9
    @tessgarcia9 6 років тому +1

    Hmm there are two kinds of Chavacano. The one in Zamboanga is a mix of Spanish, Bisaya, and Subanen. But in Cavite, it’s a mix of Spanish and Tagalog and the generation that speaks it is slowly dying out.

  • @zandergalicia7151
    @zandergalicia7151 6 років тому +35

    did you know that filipinos is the fastest nationality to learn foreign Language ? we can learn japanese or korean language in just 3 months.

    • @zignosband
      @zignosband 5 років тому +4

      Shempre! sa daming wika at dialecto sa PILIPINAS. KAYA in born na sa mga Pilipino na maging LINGUISTIC. Most Filipino in abroad speaks 4 languages; Ilocano, kapangpangan, TAGALOG, English or ILongo, Cebuano, TAGALOG, English etc. Some are more than 4

    • @aimie2689
      @aimie2689 5 років тому +3

      I learn Korean language in just 1 month, only self study.

    • @genebijou3772
      @genebijou3772 5 років тому +1

      Source or it's never true.

    • @nekoplaysescanor7930
      @nekoplaysescanor7930 5 років тому +2

      watched anime, instan learn japanese

    • @monie4786
      @monie4786 5 років тому +1

      Pero parang mawawala na ang language natin dahil marami na ang filipinong nagsasalita ng korean at japanese language

  • @Bhk440
    @Bhk440 6 років тому +8

    Yo hablo espanol pero mi grammatica imperfecto, kaya ko rin tagalog, pati kapampangan biyasa ku and i can also speak english, gane apak man bahasa indonesia.

    • @diary_cha
      @diary_cha 6 років тому

      PatPineda Volleyball bein

    • @jimrommelviovicente8246
      @jimrommelviovicente8246 5 років тому

      PatPineda..Saya juga berbicara bahasa kamu. Nukarin ka ibat?...De donde eres?

  • @arc7495
    @arc7495 2 роки тому +1

    FIlipino here! I can speak Cebuano, Tagalog, and English! Currently learning French

  • @JayHeartwing
    @JayHeartwing 3 роки тому +2

    I'm a mix of Kapampangan and Waray, but only speak Tagalog, a little of Kapampangan, and need to learn Waray.