Can Filipino Americans Identify All These DIFFERENT Filipino Languages?

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Rice Squad

Rice Squad

Жыл бұрын

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Tagalog, Hiligaynon, Waray Waray, Cebuano, Chavacano, and Bikol are just some of the hundreds of Filipino languages in the world. How many of those Filipino languages can the average Filipino American guess?
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#Filipino #Cebuano #Visaya

Пікірлер: 429
@RiceSquad
@RiceSquad Жыл бұрын
Meet Asians here and download EME Hive today - npayt.onelink.me/IlJX/ricesquadyt
@stephhmariiie
@stephhmariiie Жыл бұрын
The two men flirtingggg is sending meeee. Love it
@goldengirl1460
@goldengirl1460 Жыл бұрын
Ilonggo is the culture and people, Hiligaynon is the language. Also, we only have 100-plus languages, not thousands, Paul.
@RiceSquad
@RiceSquad Жыл бұрын
😅
@chriswritescopy8833
@chriswritescopy8833 Жыл бұрын
I've worked with PSA once to conduct Census. We have 128 official dialects.
@wakwakk23
@wakwakk23 Жыл бұрын
I was shocked as well when he said that we have thousands of languages hehe.. but great video btw.
@billyingles
@billyingles Жыл бұрын
Depends on who you ask... Officially the language is called Hiligaynon. People from Iloilo call it Ilonggo. People from negros occidental refer to it as Hiligaynon and can get kinda offended if you call it Ilonggo. People from South Cotabato in Mindanao where the language is also spoken refer to it as Ilonggo, many of them I have asked think that Hiligaynon is a the "deep" version of the language.
@markv1974
@markv1974 Жыл бұрын
Kinda weird. Hiligaynon is from ilig or flow. Its has two sub languages kini raya. (Ka ini raya of the uplands) and hinilawod (ha ini lawod or of the coasts). Kiniraya is the language spoken in west aklan, whole of antique, parts of capiz, all of iloilo except iloilo city and parts of the 5th district. Hinilawod is spoken in parts of 5th district and iloilo city. Hinilawod evolved into sinini (si ini sina or the chinese) becuase iloilo city had lots of chinese. People in negros use hiligyanon becuase they dont like being called ilonggo. Ahehe. Ilonggo is not a culture as they practically have the same culture as the rest of panay.
@Bunnier3bbit22
@Bunnier3bbit22 Жыл бұрын
Kinda hoping they would have some Northern languages like Ilokano,Pangasinan,and Kapampangan since their a very unique sounding languages in the Ph
@jennocontreras623
@jennocontreras623 Жыл бұрын
I agree. My mom's from Pangasinan while my dad's from Bicol. Pangalatok is a bit tricky to understand and speak, but is very interesting to listen to. Bicolano is a bit closer to Tagalog to an extent, but there are also variations of it among places in the Bicol region.
@criscris428
@criscris428 Жыл бұрын
kapampangan is hard... you can be a person that understand most filipino dialects but when you hear kapampangan you go oh shit. whachu saying.
@jaydeleon695
@jaydeleon695 Жыл бұрын
​​@@criscris428 yes. But imo it's the most affectionate/sweet sounding especially compared to Batangueño
@sumahibaby3910
@sumahibaby3910 Жыл бұрын
These were literally the ones I thought would be in here, but to my surprise they weren’t. I was lost the whole time except for the Tagalog and Visaya.
@Popororo.
@Popororo. Жыл бұрын
@@criscris428 RIGHT EVERYTIME my mom speaks it like talking to my titas I’m like wadafuk r u saying mom 💀
@gon_freecs4030
@gon_freecs4030 Жыл бұрын
As a future language teacher, I think Filipino students should learn the difference between languages and dialects. Because some Filipinos think that the dialects of the Philippines are Illongo, Bisaya, Bicolano etc. which is wrong because those are also languages of the Philippines. When we say dialect, these are the under umbrella language or a variation of a specific language. For ex. Filipino language, the dialects are Tagalog Cavite, Tagalog Batangeño etc.
@therodchannel
@therodchannel Жыл бұрын
Since you will be a future teacher, don't stress yourself to differentiate the language and dialect. Because it's just the spelling that matters.
@gon_freecs4030
@gon_freecs4030 Жыл бұрын
@@therodchannel 🤦
@fernandocruz4877
@fernandocruz4877 Жыл бұрын
Before the people of this archipelago understand each other. According to Magellan's chronicler, Figapetta, his slave who was named Enrique, when translated to english meant Henry, to mock England then, was the king of England. 'Enrique was from Mallaca and when he set foot in what is now known Philippines, he understood the language. We were divided and conquered by the western europeans to subdue us. MGA BWAKAINA NILA!!!
@elitemation
@elitemation Жыл бұрын
@@gon_freecs4030 my exact reaction
@rencedeasis509
@rencedeasis509 Жыл бұрын
@@elitemation I just thought. ",Bruuh whaaaaat?" 🤦😆
@natt07048
@natt07048 Жыл бұрын
1.) Filipino and Tagalog are the same language linguistically speaking. They're indistinguishible in their spoken forms, and only differ when it comes to their political definitions. Filipino is the national language based on the Manila dialect of Tagalog. But still, it's basically Tagalog. People tend to exaggerate the differences between the two but even linguists agree that THEY ARE THE SAME LANGUAGE. 2.) From what I know Hiligaynon is the official name of the language while Ilonggo is what people call it colloquially. 3.) There are only around 120-180 languages in the Philippines, not thousands.
@TTCanadaJapan
@TTCanadaJapan Жыл бұрын
Filipino is just standardized tagalog
@voltairehortizuela4112
@voltairehortizuela4112 Жыл бұрын
sad Ilocano wasnt used but im happy to see the different dialects and languages ❤️🤍💙💛🇵🇭
@goldace986
@goldace986 Жыл бұрын
Theyre all in Hawaii unfortunately, lol. 😂😂🤣🤣
@Tony-ex2rm
@Tony-ex2rm 10 ай бұрын
@@goldace986 Or in daly city and queens
@MADesigns_
@MADesigns_ Жыл бұрын
The multi-ethnic boy group ALAMAT introduced me to different languages in the Philippines. If it weren’t for them, I wouldn’t have got most of these right 😅
@Cookie-vo6qd
@Cookie-vo6qd 5 ай бұрын
Hahaha same..
@justmejus
@justmejus Жыл бұрын
Hm, I think the Hiligaynon speaker might have been confused about the difference between the terms, Ilonggo and Hiligaynon. I've been taught that Ilonggo (technically speaking) refers to the people, while Hiligaynon refers to the language. It's not that people from Iloilo are Ilonggos while those from Bacolod are Hiligaynon. They both in fact speak Hiligaynon and are Ilonggo people. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
@kengjang25
@kengjang25 Жыл бұрын
you're correct. Hiligaynon is the one that Ilonggo people speak. Ilonggo = people Hiligaynon = language if he wants the different language, it will be Kiray-a (kiniray-a) which is also spoken in their place too.
@moviemania1583
@moviemania1583 Жыл бұрын
correct, ilonggos speaks 2 different language, the hiligaynon and karay-a or kinaray-a
@Mika88Kenichi
@Mika88Kenichi Жыл бұрын
you're correct. My friend corrected me when I asked if she spoke Ilonggo. She said she speaks Hiligaynon and is a Bacolodnon not Ilonggo as she's not from Iloilo.
@portiapamillo6888
@portiapamillo6888 Жыл бұрын
That's true, there's even multiple dialects of Hiligaynon if you count the regional variations. We have standard Hiligaynon, used in media and publications, Urban Hiligaynon (shoutout city folks), Rural Hiligaynon (influenced by Akeanon/Kiniray-a), Negrense Hiligaynon, and the Hiligaynon spoken in Mindanao provinces that have evolved from when migrants of Panay Island who have settled in those regions mid 1900s that's already influenced by Bisaya etc.
@AngryKittens
@AngryKittens Жыл бұрын
They are more or less synonymous. But they have different root words, hence the confusion. Ilonggo basically means "[Person] from Iloilo" (the old name for the city was Ilong-Ilong). Hiligaynon, on the other hand, is from Spanish "Hiligueynos", from native Visayan "Iliganon", roughly meaning "people of the coast where the river meets the sea". Both can be used to refer to the people. But since Hiligaynon ends in the "-anon" suffix, which literally means "pertaining to" or "coming from", it is used more often for culture and language. While Ilonggo has the Spanish -o/-a suffix (like in FilipinO, FilipinA), and thus used more often when referring to a person or the people as a whole.
@lgmal
@lgmal Жыл бұрын
ILONGGO HERE !!! absolutely felt sooo much joy hearing hiligaynon on here!! currently in california but hold my bacolod + iloilo home close to my heart!
@dasigkatama029
@dasigkatama029 Жыл бұрын
Hiligaynon is Bisaya too, Bisaya is not exclusive to Cebuano because it is an umbrella term... They were not the first people to be called Bisaya. It was the Ilonggos thn waray then extended to them
@cebuelitemachinesinc.1995
@cebuelitemachinesinc.1995 Жыл бұрын
If hiligaynon is Bisaya why can't they can't understand Cebuano?Bisaya is a generic name or a coloquial name of Cebuano speaking people 😄
@dasigkatama029
@dasigkatama029 Жыл бұрын
@@cebuelitemachinesinc.1995 mag aral ka muna udong alamin mo ang Umbrella terminology etc
@dasigkatama029
@dasigkatama029 Жыл бұрын
@@cebuelitemachinesinc.1995 Hegemony tawag dian
@Yamie1101
@Yamie1101 Жыл бұрын
@@dasigkatama029 lol Hegemony talaga? 😛
@jimgorycki4013
@jimgorycki4013 Жыл бұрын
Excellent that you included Chavacano.
@johndubsgo
@johndubsgo Жыл бұрын
I only got 3/6. Since my family is from Luzon, I can recognize Tagalog and Ilocano (sadly not show cased). But I was able to recognize Visaya Chavacano. Good stuff Paul~
@KnH07
@KnH07 Жыл бұрын
I am a filipino and i'm from northern luzon I know iloco but not an ilocano since i'm a cordilleran. The reason iloco is not too widely known is that ilocanos like the their cordilleran neighbours are mostly RESERVED. They speak iloco among themselves and other ilocanos. You know if one is ilocano once s/he tells you his place. A convo would be like this A talking to B. A: Pilipino ka? B: oo/opo. A: Taga saan? B: (mentions any province from region 1 and region 2 or region 3 but adds parents are from any province from region 1). A: ahh Ah. ilocano ka garod? B: wen. Then they both converse in iloco.
@jezekielmarkapelar5539
@jezekielmarkapelar5539 Жыл бұрын
I always love watching these. My family speaks Chavacano, Cebuano, and Filipino (I have roots from Iloilo City, Capiz, Cebu, Zamboanga City, Basilan, & Cavite) so its so much fun watching other people guess the languages I grew up around., especially Chavacano since I only ever hear it around my family.
@christophersundita7383
@christophersundita7383 Жыл бұрын
A lot of Filipinos are taught that Filipino and Tagalog are different. And in theory, they are supposed to be. But in reality, despite the best efforts of the Komisyon sa Wikang Filipino, for the most part, Filipino is a variety/subdialect of the dialect of the Tagalog language spoken in Metro Manila. This was a sentiment expressed by past KWF chairman Richard Nolasco
@King-lc4we
@King-lc4we Жыл бұрын
Tagalog has English words & spelling are mostly wrong like pilipino or kamusta while filipino has a lot of Spanish & proper spelling kumusta, Filipino, punyeta, Conyo
@christophersundita7383
@christophersundita7383 Жыл бұрын
@@King-lc4we Please keep in mind that Filipino was proposed in 1987 and was carried out in the 1990s. So your definition of Filipino also applies to Tagalog because Tagalog did that long before. There really isn't any difference at all as much as people try to say there is.
@fernandocruz4877
@fernandocruz4877 Жыл бұрын
Filipino is the people of the PH Pilipino is the language. Pilipino is mostly based on Tagalog dialect. Most filipinos know the national language, w/c is Pilipino language.
@christophersundita7383
@christophersundita7383 Жыл бұрын
@@fernandocruz4877First, Tagalog is a language, not a dialect. If Tagalog were a dialect, what would it be a dialect of? Second, Pilipino was the name given to Tagalog from 1961 to 1987. It's no longer used in the Philippines.
@johnmichaelcanares2633
@johnmichaelcanares2633 Жыл бұрын
Correct. Ask any Bisaya and they will say Filipino is just Tagalog. Any Bisaya will just call it Tagalog anyway instead of Filipino. It's kind of like an inadvertent insult to us Bisayas if you call it Filipino because to us it just sounds Tagalog. And this is not just the Bisaya in Cebu, this is a sentiment to most Bisaya in the Philippines. How about we call Bisaya Filipino then? See how that sounds? It sounds elitist to us. If you ask any people in different regions outside of the tagalog speaking regions, no one will call it Filipino. They will call it Tagalog instead. We only call it Filipino in the academics or in legal documents, etc. You know why? Because to us it doesn't matter how you label it, call it Filipino, Pilipino, or whatever. To us it's Tagalog, nothing more.
@Mika88Kenichi
@Mika88Kenichi Жыл бұрын
I'm familiar with almost all the languages but wow it's the first time I heard Bikolano spoken. I only understood a few words. I am fluent in 3 of the languages and can understand 60-70% of Hiligaynon and Chavacano but really it's always interesting to hear our local languages. The Waray-waray dialect is definitely from Samar as the accent and some terms used are different from ours. I am fluent in the Winaray dialect spoken in the Eastern part of Leyte, same as the dialect of the towns south of Tacloban. We have different Winaray dialects from Leyte alone. I met someone from Antique and she say's she speaks Kinaray-a but understood Hiligaynon and Winaray since both have the same terms. I had a classmate from Masbate and she can understand Winaray but we both talk in Cebuano or Bisaya.
@kalokalo6930
@kalokalo6930 Жыл бұрын
He speak fluent Bikolano (Central) but doesn't sound native at all. He sounded like unsure of what to say.
@my_other_side473
@my_other_side473 Жыл бұрын
@@kalokalo6930 he's not fluent at all, he replaced a lot of word he forgot with English words. I guess he's living outside the country longer and he forgot most of the words.
@kalokalo6930
@kalokalo6930 Жыл бұрын
@@my_other_side473 you can expect that with Bikolano speakers especially Central Bikol and Bikolanos living outside Bikol region.. I do that too, especially if you speak more than one language, you tend to switch languages unknowingly and it's sometimes confusing. That is why I understand if he uses English words from time to time. But he just don't sound native at all. He sounded like he learned it years ago.
@epochseven4197
@epochseven4197 Жыл бұрын
​@@kalokalo6930 he might be a heritage speaker (i.e. he picked it up from his parents at home while growing up in the US) ...he did have a American accent.
@dasigkatama029
@dasigkatama029 Жыл бұрын
Please call Cebuano as cebuano not bisaya, Bisaya is umbrella term both waray and Hiligaynon are binisafa
@tanashiri_boi
@tanashiri_boi Жыл бұрын
Bicolano and Hiligaynon just hits diff bro😍 it's the riff in their voice like there are assigned notes as they talk. I like it even though I'm bisaya XD
@willbowden6897
@willbowden6897 Жыл бұрын
(As a note, Hiligaynon is also bisaya. If you go to remote parts of Iloilo province people will refer to it as bisaya lang. Typically bisaya refers to Cebuano adjacent dialects, which is what I presume you’re referring to, but it can actually be used to refer to any language in the Visayas like Karaya, Waray, Aklanon, etc.)
@rosev1107
@rosev1107 Жыл бұрын
My parents are from Luzon, I was expecting Ilocano lol. Rarely ever hear any Visayas dialects but interesting vid! 👌
@dannyluv78
@dannyluv78 Жыл бұрын
Pati siyak.
@King-lc4we
@King-lc4we Жыл бұрын
i speak the bisaya language but i can only understand the tagalog dialect but never heard of ilocano dialect
@rosev1107
@rosev1107 Жыл бұрын
@@King-lc4we Ilocano is spoken in the northern Luzon provinces. Sounds nothing like Tagalog lol
@abrqzx
@abrqzx Жыл бұрын
@@rosev1107 Ilocano sound Indonesian tbh
@rvat2003
@rvat2003 Жыл бұрын
@@King-lc4we Tagalog *language, Ilocano *language
@ashasenjutv9079
@ashasenjutv9079 Жыл бұрын
Where there are lots of waterfalls should be ILIGAN (so he is Bisaya) but he speaks in Waray so i am certain he is from CALBAYOG. Fun fact; ILIGAN has 23 WATERFALLS and CALBAYOG has 22.
@johnvcm
@johnvcm Жыл бұрын
Loved this! Do illocano and Pangasinan next!
@ajLagerfeld
@ajLagerfeld Жыл бұрын
Wow I am half Ilonggo and I can understand Hiligaynon eventhough I don't speak both ilonggo and Hiligaynon.. I love hearing Chavacano qnd I understand most of it since I am practicing Spanish
@freepress3631
@freepress3631 Жыл бұрын
My Fathers from Mindanao, my Mothers from the Visayas, they worked and meet at Luzon, been in Bulacan till Kinder, then have my elementary in Cebu , graduated elementary in Zamboanga, settled back here in Cebu, being exposed to many cultures, is an eye opening specially in Mindanao, wherein , Christian, Muslims, Ethnic tribes, with diverse religions and sect. made me more understanding and open minded about our culture, rather than a lense looking at a certain pedestal, Proud Pinoy Kpop stan lol
@maanbustamante
@maanbustamante Жыл бұрын
zamboanga city?
@AsianSP
@AsianSP Жыл бұрын
My father is cebuano from Neg. Or. then my mother is Ilongga from Neg. Occ. and I stayed 4 yrs in Negros before moving to Cavite, stayed for 5 yrs then came back again to Negros for another 5 yrs and now We stayed here in Cavite for almost 12 yrs but we stayed in Bicol for half of year. And it came to my realization how rich the culture of Philippines are.. Anyway I always got a highest grade in Filipino back in Highschool because of how I exposed to many languages of Philippines😂 I remembered before when we read novels or poetry, I can easily understand the deep words in Filipino unlike to my classmates they don’t have any idea that it was a Visayan word😂
@maanbustamante
@maanbustamante Жыл бұрын
@@AsianSP cebuano imung papa then nirelocate sa negros, tama? relatives kay taga oriental pud akong mama kay taga zamboanguita 😁
@AsianSP
@AsianSP Жыл бұрын
Hmm.. sa amoa man gud sa Negros bisa’g dili mi taga cebu, Cebuano gyapon tawag namo sa among lengwahe kay originated man sya sa cebu bisan ang Taga occidental mao pud Iloggo ila tawag mao nang maglibog ko unsay pasabot nila sa Bisaya diri sa kamaynilaan😂 anyway ako papa taga Bayawan pero nipuyo mi sa Dumaguete..
@maanbustamante
@maanbustamante Жыл бұрын
@@AsianSP aaw ana ba. nagstay kos cebu and different kaayu ag cebuano sa bisaya sa dumaguete/negros oriental man gud hehe. akong bisaya na di kaayu maayu kay taga zamboanga city ko and chavacano akong mother tongue kay di man gani makapasa sa standards sa mga bisaya speakers gyud hahaha
@jolu3505
@jolu3505 11 ай бұрын
Please do one with an ilocano and indonesian speaker, i’ve noticed similarities with some words between them 😊
@GuremaManaba
@GuremaManaba Жыл бұрын
9:31 If Honobread went this event and I speak Bisaya at front of her(she is a storytime animator in KZbin,she is a Fil-Am) she understands tagalog language but some are familiar, she almost got screwed
@li.moreau
@li.moreau Күн бұрын
i love this series, i hope u can do more
@user-en5hg5mw7l
@user-en5hg5mw7l Жыл бұрын
I can only identify visayan and tagolog because it’s the two more common ones in California. The others, I would never know or be able to guess. I would probably also identify chabacano because of the more Spanish dialect sounds.
@ani-pop1189
@ani-pop1189 Жыл бұрын
I'm waiting for the Northern languages, languages used in Luzon. Hoping there's a part 2 in which these languages were included
@seangen
@seangen Жыл бұрын
Nice video. I hope you could feature the other Filipino languages in the northern and western areas. 1. Ilocano 2. Ibanag 3. Itawis 4. Zamboangeno 5. Kapampangan 6. Pangasinense And many more. 😊
@risselle
@risselle Жыл бұрын
My mother is Bicolano, and that's the first time I heard Bicolano spoken like that? I wonder, where he is from Bicol? Great video btw!
@rencedeasis509
@rencedeasis509 Жыл бұрын
Bicol (language) has a lot of variations too! I'm a bicolano but sometimes bicolano terms from other areas I cant just comprehend. 😆
@foaesoae
@foaesoae Жыл бұрын
waiting for part 2!
@JugsPerspective
@JugsPerspective Жыл бұрын
Ilonggo = People who are from Iloilo City Bacolodnon = People who are from Bacolod City Negrense = People who are from the Island of Negros Hiligaynon = the common Language used
@somedude96
@somedude96 Жыл бұрын
Hiligaynon - somewhat of a mix of Tagalog and Bisaya with Kansai accent imo.
@katawamagiliw4963
@katawamagiliw4963 Жыл бұрын
I hit the subscribe button when you correctly refer them as languages and not dialects... Charot. Btw, Filipino is one of the dialects of Tagalog language!
@gypsyfox3973
@gypsyfox3973 Жыл бұрын
I can relate to the Cebuanong-Bisaya speaker where I can't speak straight bisaya without adding english words hahaha
@elegiocantiga1756
@elegiocantiga1756 Жыл бұрын
Hahaha buwaon!
@elegiocantiga1756
@elegiocantiga1756 Жыл бұрын
Bakakon!
@King-lc4we
@King-lc4we Жыл бұрын
Buang
@moviemania1583
@moviemania1583 Жыл бұрын
many filipinos are still confused about Filipino language and tagalog and also the difference between ilonggo and hiligaynon..also with cebuano and bisaya
@maanbustamante
@maanbustamante Жыл бұрын
this is so nice to know that chavacano is pretty much known even to overseas born-raised PH kids 😄
@katawamagiliw4963
@katawamagiliw4963 Жыл бұрын
Hiligaynon, Waray, and Cebuano are some of the Bisaya languages not just Cebuano alone.
@najgarcia410
@najgarcia410 8 ай бұрын
Akeanon and Kinaray-a too.
@inf4mousvloglife1572
@inf4mousvloglife1572 Жыл бұрын
Its 175 ethnic groups in the Philippines, I know some the languages 10 of it I can spoke very well and 23 of I understand but not fluently spoken.
@rvat2003
@rvat2003 Жыл бұрын
What? Which 10 languages can you speak very well? I'm genuinely curious.
@inf4mousvloglife1572
@inf4mousvloglife1572 Жыл бұрын
@@rvat2003 you want know boy? Bukidnon, maranao, bisaya, tagalog, ilonggo, waray, iranon, Cebuano, bil anon, chavacano.
@moviemania1583
@moviemania1583 Жыл бұрын
@@inf4mousvloglife1572 i think bisaya is not a language
@citrezene
@citrezene Жыл бұрын
the mom impression hits to close to home :')
@JosephOccenoBFH
@JosephOccenoBFH Жыл бұрын
I always thought that there was a slight difference between the Ilonggo/Hiligaynon spoken in Iloilo and the one in Negros (Bacolod).
@opong72
@opong72 Жыл бұрын
There really is no difference.
@najgarcia410
@najgarcia410 8 ай бұрын
I think there's no difference between those two provinces. But not with the neighboring provinces of Iloilo and Capiz. They have words that differ from each other. I'm from Roxas City, Capiz who works in Iloilo for years now.
@aiyaxxvon3768
@aiyaxxvon3768 Жыл бұрын
We have learned some languages of the Philippines in my school its really amazing that Half of the Filipinos like spicy food❤
@metalfacebingo
@metalfacebingo Жыл бұрын
You guys should add some Kapampangan and Pangasinan in this mix
@MrKrinkelz
@MrKrinkelz Жыл бұрын
I only understand 3 languages confidently english cebuano and filipino/tagalog. Its fking difficult man, there are deep cebuano words that i barely know, when i was an acolyte of the church i read the cebuano bible, its only when i was 14 that i realized that the the cebuano word for "clouds" is "panganod"
@marikitliwayway6703
@marikitliwayway6703 Жыл бұрын
Filipino is basically tagalog but has been standardized for national use.
@czarevan2261
@czarevan2261 Жыл бұрын
In Waray, that guys say "sa" but he' from Calbayog City, then "ha" word are used from Catbalogan, Borongan, southern part of Samar, Gandara, San Jorge, Pagsanghan, Tarangnan, Matuguinao, Tacloban, and Leyte, but they both understand each other. Hehehe
@jusjard
@jusjard Жыл бұрын
Can someone enlighten me on the difference between Ilonggo and Hiligaynon? I always thought Hiligaynon is the language and Ilonggo is the people
@kengjang25
@kengjang25 Жыл бұрын
same, Hiligaynon is the language while Ilonggo is the people. Misinformation na sya kahit sa isang episode pa.
@Amandalaz0
@Amandalaz0 Жыл бұрын
Hiligaynon is the language and culture of the ilonggo people from Iloilo that traveled to other places
@christophersundita7383
@christophersundita7383 Жыл бұрын
Ilonggo originally meant coming from Iloilo, but people nowadays use it interchangeably with Hiligaynon. Hiligaynon is more inclusive as the language is spoken natively by the inhabitants of other places like Negros Occidental, Capiz, Antique, Guimaras, Masbate, and parts of Mindanao
@davecelo7648
@davecelo7648 Жыл бұрын
Hilagaynon is the spoken language of People of Both Iloilo and majority of people in Negros Occidental. Ilonggo is refer to the people of Iloilo. Though people in Negros sometimes being associated by other ethnic group as Ilonggo, considering Ilonggo/s are called to those who live in the City and Province of Iloilo. While in Negros Occidental and Bacolod is quite different, Technically, We call people leaving in Bacolod as "Bacolodnon" or "Bacoleño/Bacoleña" and we call people leaving in the Province of Negros Occidental as "Negrense/s" though people leaving in Bacolod can also be called Negrense since they are in the same Province. It is just confusing to others, so majority use to describe people in Bacolod/Negros Occidental as Ilonggo as well.
@moviemania1583
@moviemania1583 Жыл бұрын
ilonggo is the people, ilonggos speaks two different language, hiligaynon and karay-a
@russelandr
@russelandr Жыл бұрын
i tought iriga launguage will be in this video since it's one of the hardest to speak in the country.
@tjdavz4750
@tjdavz4750 Жыл бұрын
Bilatibay yah. Pagkaon dayon ang intro ba. Linti yah hahaha
@deeoh9420
@deeoh9420 Жыл бұрын
5:27 he is actually not saying "annyeonghaseyo", he is saying "anong sa inyo?" (literal translation: "what's yours?" / meaning: "what are you going to buy?" which is what the person would respond if you buy in a local sari-sari store and say "pabili po~") but it sounds like the Korean greeting so it is used as a joke😂
@michelleo7002
@michelleo7002 Жыл бұрын
Bruh im surprised the people i met on eme are on the ad
@ginag17
@ginag17 10 ай бұрын
I was born in Manila to mestizo parents. My first language was Spanish, followed by English. Although I spent my first 7 years in Manila, I never spoke Tagalog. Our yayas and chofers spoke Spanish or Ilonggo as my Mom was from Iloilo but her Hacienda was in Negros Occ right on the border of Oriental. I learned to speak Ilonggo soon after moving to Iloilo. Cebuano I was familiar with due to summers spent in Negros. So although not as fluent in Cebuano, I can totally understand and able to carry conversation. Moved to Manila for college, our Tagalog or Filipino was so bad, I along with a bunch of fellow Ilonggas & Cebuanas got put into a remedial Filipino class to help us learn the language. For our Spanish classes (thinking we could Coast here), the nuns were wise and put all of us Spanish speaking students in an advanced Spanish class. The Philippines is very much a melting pot.
@minim6981
@minim6981 8 ай бұрын
what happened to all the Spanish speakers?
@selfpro-found1126
@selfpro-found1126 8 ай бұрын
Exactly! Where are the Spanish speakers?
@Ama94947
@Ama94947 6 ай бұрын
So, how is the Spanish Mestizo community nowadays? My mother is from Mestizo family while my father would consider himself Full pinoy.
@ProximaCentauri88
@ProximaCentauri88 Жыл бұрын
4:33 I'm Bikolano and we don't use "bulkano" for volcano. It's either "bulkan" or "bukid." 4:56 Dimples in Bikol is "pi'lok."
@yu___kt
@yu___kt Жыл бұрын
Hiligaynon= language/culture Ilonggo= person from Iloilo city/ province Ilonggos can speak Karay-a (another language spoken in Panay Island) and Hiligaynon. Bacolodnons and people from Negros Occidental can speak Hiligaynon.
@chacri08
@chacri08 Жыл бұрын
I thought Ilionngo/ Hiligaynon is an ethnic group too?
@yu___kt
@yu___kt Жыл бұрын
@@chacri08 let's put it like this: I am Hiligaynon but I'm not Ilonggo. Of course, If I'm from Bacolod, I'll be called Bacolodnon. People are so used to refer the term "Ilonggo" to all people who speak the Hiligaynon language that's why many are confused now.
@maxdylan3163
@maxdylan3163 Жыл бұрын
@@yu___kt people from luzon mostly used that term even if you're from bacolod and roxas city (capiz) if you speak hiligaynon they tend to identify you as ilonggo and will ask " ilonggo ka?"😅😅..
@yu___kt
@yu___kt Жыл бұрын
@@maxdylan3163 yeah even ppl from mindanao tend to use the term "Ilonggo" to identify the Hiligaynon people /culture
@arianaarmada-casino9384
@arianaarmada-casino9384 Жыл бұрын
My family is also from Iloilo!
@xXxSkyViperxXx
@xXxSkyViperxXx Жыл бұрын
oh my goodness. fil-am peeps are so confused. filipino is basically tagalog or came from tagalog. i wouldnt say tagalog isnt the national language just because the government calls it filipino. filipino is basically the standardized metro manila north dialect of tagalog. its bs to say tagalog isnt the national language just because the government calls it filipino. when u go to filipino class in schools in ph, u can basically say theyre teaching tagalog/filipino. its such an iffy thing to really separate the two as if theyre completely different, because practically speaking, theyre not completely separate.
@emilamante
@emilamante Жыл бұрын
Wassup Hyrum!!
@officialitsaey-p
@officialitsaey-p Жыл бұрын
Can you do palenquero vs chavacano please
@neknekk1
@neknekk1 Жыл бұрын
because of the accent, i dont even need 3 seconds to think for the first guy. sobrang lambing talaga.
@junvas
@junvas Жыл бұрын
I'm Filipino but I have only heard about Chavacano through Nas Daily.
@kengjang25
@kengjang25 Жыл бұрын
6:33 baka magka-develop-an ha hahaha pa-update naman kami
@kenreyes8780
@kenreyes8780 Жыл бұрын
I'm Filipino but I lived most of my life in MIami (south florida), so my english is more of a street English with latino/caribbean mixed accents lmao... welcome to our world
@hiphipjorge5755
@hiphipjorge5755 9 ай бұрын
Pretty wild! In South Florida, you rarely meet Filipinos 😂
@mikearchangel4162
@mikearchangel4162 Жыл бұрын
They did only Visayas and Mindanao..hopefully cover the Luzon next time ty😉
@jveematt2511
@jveematt2511 Жыл бұрын
The mom part is so true, they want there children to have a joa or partner and have children. To the paint it gets annoying, as my parents and relatives are always nagging me and my siblings and cousins on why we are still single compared to how they were going around as teens finding a partner.
@user-oo3lh1ls4r
@user-oo3lh1ls4r Жыл бұрын
This is what I know and what I have learned in school in Manila Philippines when I was still in elementary in the 80s. Tagalog is our main language in the Philippines at Ang Tagalog din ay Isa sa mga lahi ng Pilipino. Yun Pilipino subject is not just a Tagalog language study but it also history. Yun word na Filipino is Spanish, Filipinos have it's own alphabet like abakada and we don't have " F " letter. So we Called Piliipinas but Spanish name the country Filipinas . Ang lahi natin lahat ay Pilipino Yun Tagalog lang ang naging national language ng buong Piliipinas, si President Quezon and nag utos na gawin Tagalog National language ng buong Piliipinas para lahat tayo magkaintindihan. Ang tawag sa atin lahat ay Pilipino kung international ay Filipino.
@NO_333
@NO_333 10 ай бұрын
Bro the only 2 languages I know in the philippines is Tagalog and Bisaya. And my filipino is a broken mix of both.
@jehgelo
@jehgelo 9 ай бұрын
They should also include ilocano because I am ilocano too. It’s very different from tagalog.
@B.Scruby
@B.Scruby Жыл бұрын
I was confused with the Waray guy until i realized he was speaking Samarnon Waray. I'm Leyteño and we have a hard time understanding Samarnon Waray because ours is so simplified. Lol there are clead differences between Samar and Leyte Waray. Ours is more direct, absoluteltly no tone, shorter sentences. Theirs is more singsong and have deeper words. Samarnon Waray is closer to the original way of speaking it. Samarnons also have a hard time understanding us because we have a habit of shortening EVERYTHING. Like when he said "Didto sa kun diin damo waterfall", if we were to make it to Leyteño version, it would be "Didto han kun diin damo nga waterfall" BUT we'd shorten it to "Didnton damo waterfall".
@apolakigamingandmore6376
@apolakigamingandmore6376 Жыл бұрын
2:50 The difference are that, they're languages, just like the Romance Languages.
@lourjfuntimeworld
@lourjfuntimeworld 10 ай бұрын
3:11 ilonggo? idk my mum sounds like that and is from iloilo
@apolakigamingandmore6376
@apolakigamingandmore6376 Жыл бұрын
Nocarin ya yng Capampangan? Balacusa atyu ya queng bidyo. Where is Kapampangan? I thought it is in the video.
@danshim6814
@danshim6814 Жыл бұрын
the Filipinos preserved the culture, family values..above all most of us really deeply believe in God above all. I think most Filipinos respect and fear God..
@marcel_viana
@marcel_viana Жыл бұрын
10:42 I'm completely in love with him and after finding out he's single, I'm even more, he's sooo cute...😳😳🙈🙈
@VidAudioJojo
@VidAudioJojo 2 күн бұрын
Host Paul: "In the Philippines there are thousands of different languages. . ." There are actually 195 at most. Still a big number compared to most countries on the planet.
@pedrokawali7144
@pedrokawali7144 Жыл бұрын
which they could have used Southern Tagalog. tho... also the Bicolano one was mostly biclish
@johnmichaelcanares2633
@johnmichaelcanares2633 Жыл бұрын
I heard that Bicolano alone has different dialects as well, is that true?
@pedrokawali7144
@pedrokawali7144 Жыл бұрын
@@johnmichaelcanares2633 Yup
@abrqzx
@abrqzx Жыл бұрын
@@johnmichaelcanares2633 Bicolanos only speak Tagalog and Bicol. I was born in Bicol but in our province, most people speak Tagalog not Bikol so my language is Tagalog not Bikol
@ToonMageChannel
@ToonMageChannel Жыл бұрын
​@@abrqzx You must be from Cam Norte. Cam Sur still speaks their own Bicol dialect but with a Tagalog mix. Other places in Bicol also still speaks their own Bicol dialects. I have an uncle (not related to us but he is the husband of my mother's sister) who speaks Rinconada to his mother and father. While my relatives and I speak Coastal Bicol.
@abrqzx
@abrqzx Жыл бұрын
@@ToonMageChannel You’re correct, I’m from Camarines Norte. Here, in our province, most people speak Tagalog like 99%, and I rarely notice people using Bikol words in our province. I don’t even understand Bikol at all. I studied in Ateneo de Naga for my Senior High years and I didn’t even understand my classmates language LMAO. I always say to them that even though I’m also Bikolano, we don’t speak Bikolano in the Northern part of Bikol. Gladly, most of them also knows how to speak Tagalog but not fluently. I graduated Senior High way back 2019 but still I didn’t learn Bikol at all since in University, teachers would only speak either Tagalog or English and I can only hear Bikolano when my classmates are talking casually
@pngnp
@pngnp Жыл бұрын
Please feature kapampangan, ilokano, ifugao, batangas tagalog, panggasinense
@rvat2003
@rvat2003 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the northern languages (which are WAY different than all the languages featured here) would be a great and rightful addition.
@rvat2003
@rvat2003 Жыл бұрын
*Pangasinan
@sagadabeans
@sagadabeans Жыл бұрын
Pangasinense is the name of the people. Pangasinan is the name of the province and the language.
@pngnp
@pngnp Жыл бұрын
@@sagadabeans thanks for the info 😊
@IvysKitchen
@IvysKitchen Жыл бұрын
Where’s the Ilokano speaker at?
@jennocontreras623
@jennocontreras623 Жыл бұрын
I knew that man speaking Bicolano hasn't spoken it for a while. It was a bit awkward. I can't speak it, but my dad's side does, and it's much faster than that hehe. But good job trying 👍
@icedpatek860
@icedpatek860 Жыл бұрын
i think they should get somebody who speaks Aklanon from Aklan its prob one of the hardest to learn lmao
@achillesroblox
@achillesroblox Жыл бұрын
Born and raised and still living here in the Philippines and I don't even know ANY of these lmao
@jeffdive9457
@jeffdive9457 9 ай бұрын
Try to hear more ethnic language it's completely different, try T'boli, Bla'an, Manubo, Teroray, Mandaya. And Also languages of Muslim's areas in Mindanao they have different languages that they could not even understand each other.
@Diyel
@Diyel Жыл бұрын
I lost my shit at the "Filipinos are Pacific Islanders too" HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
@maanbustamante
@maanbustamante Жыл бұрын
i kept skipping and ffw the video, which part??? 😆
@nestorjrlim3938
@nestorjrlim3938 Жыл бұрын
Like it or nor, Filipino is Majority Tagalog based, basically like 90% of it is Tagalog, while the rest is a mixture from the rest of the other Luzon languages. If you think it's unfair, it's even more unfair to the modern Tagalogs tho, because so many words have been slowly being forgotten from the Tagalog Lexicon, from words like Salumpuwit and Salumbayag which were deemed too unappealing to be used for the Filipino language. And even then, there are Hokkien and Castillan/Mexican Spanish words that have been added that aren't part of Tagalog, but is distinctly Filipino. If you are Tagalog or someone not Tagalog, go to the remote places of Southern Tagalog Region, places like Mindoro, Romblon or Lubang, the accent and as well as the dialect of these places are very different enough that you would find some words that aren't Filipino, but distinctly Tagalog with some influences from Hiligaynon and other Bisayan languages. The greatest example of bastardisation of Tagalog in my opinion, is the way balinguyngoy has slowly been removed from the cultural lexicon even in my own province. Balinguyngoy is nose bleed in English, but so few of my fellow Tagalogs even know what this means. Tagalog, or what they call it now, Old Tagalog is such a beautriful and simple language, it uses multiple words that already exist in order to convey meaning or even create a new one.
@zachdwight1385
@zachdwight1385 Жыл бұрын
What's the difference between Ilonggo and Hiligaynon? I always thought they're the same.
@chacri08
@chacri08 Жыл бұрын
I thought it’s the same, too…..
@rvat2003
@rvat2003 Жыл бұрын
They are used interchangeably. Ilonggo refers to an ethnic group that speaks the Hiligaynon language. However, because there is a province named "Iloilo", whose inhabitants are called "Ilonggos", many of the non-Iloilo Hiligaynon-speaking peoples sometimes don't label themselves "Ilonggo" because they're not from the province of "Iloilo". Plus, not all people in the province of Iloilo are ethnic Ilonggos, half of the province is Kinaray-a. I guess this is the product of the laymen's tendency to think political border = people distinction when political borders are often made not only because of ethnic differences. TL:DR 1. Ilonggo = ethnolinguistic identity, also used for the language 2. Iloilo = province aka political entity 3. Ilonggo (2.0) = has become synonymous with people native to the Iloilo territory 4. Karay-a = a related but DISTINCT ethnolinguistic group that also lives within the Iloilo province, altho they also live in Antique where they are the majority 5. Hiligaynon = a Visayan language spoken mainly by people that identity as "Ilonggo" or not (due to potential Iloilo confusion)
@moviemania1583
@moviemania1583 Жыл бұрын
ilonggo is the people or refers to ethnicity, hilgaynon is the languages...ilonggos speaks two major languages, hiligaynon and karay-a
@zachdwight1385
@zachdwight1385 Жыл бұрын
@@rvat2003 thank you
@joshuacabanlit5741
@joshuacabanlit5741 Жыл бұрын
I understood 4 hihi bicol, tagalog, ilonggo, cebuano/bisaya. Yay!
@sashimae8336
@sashimae8336 Жыл бұрын
bisaya is a language and cebuano is one.of the bisayan dialect
@joshuacabanlit5741
@joshuacabanlit5741 Жыл бұрын
@@sashimae8336 ano po ang ibang mga bisayan dialects po?
@sashimae8336
@sashimae8336 Жыл бұрын
Waray, davaoneño etc.
@rvat2003
@rvat2003 Жыл бұрын
@@sashimae8336 Nah. More like "Bisaya" is a couple of languages (Cebuano, Waray, Hiligaynon, etc.) while "Davaoeño" refers to a specific Cebuano dialect.
@Wonderland584
@Wonderland584 Жыл бұрын
@@joshuacabanlit5741 boss bicolano ka??
@rachelkawaii
@rachelkawaii Жыл бұрын
The chaotic energy of the Waray-waray speaker grabe kaupay hahaha
@eugenecabatbat4553
@eugenecabatbat4553 7 ай бұрын
Not mention pangasinan langauage, pangasinense here..im happy to here all anyway.mabuhay philippines!
@raulbvelarde2701
@raulbvelarde2701 Жыл бұрын
Very nice video. At least you value different Dialects of the Philippines. My native Tongue is Waray2 but I can speak 3 more dialects including the National.Language and I can speak 3 foreign languages....
@rvat2003
@rvat2003 Жыл бұрын
*Languages of the Philippines. Every single one of the languages in this video are individual languages. When comparing different lects (the name of a particular speech) with each other, we should be critical whether which lect is referring to a specific dialect of a language or to a language itself. For example, if we were given two names of lects: Batangueño and Cebuano, we'll know that "Batangueño" refers to a dialect (of the Tagalog language) while "Cebuano" refers to a Visayan language that is spoken in Central Visayas and Mindanao.
@skyhart9926
@skyhart9926 4 ай бұрын
Any northern Philippine languages? Like Ilocano and Kapampangan. Their languages are so distinct. Especially Kapampangan. None of the Filipinos in this video would ever understand Kapampangan if they heard it.
@Dapper_Dean
@Dapper_Dean Жыл бұрын
Auwww di nila sinali ang langgwahe ng mga ibang parte ng Ilocos, like Pangalatok, Kapangpangan, Ilocano, etc...
@sagadabeans
@sagadabeans Жыл бұрын
Walang salitang Panggalatok
@DYL151
@DYL151 Жыл бұрын
I loved hearing Bicol 🇵🇭🇵🇭
@BlackiddieBlack
@BlackiddieBlack Жыл бұрын
Ukinnayo 3rd most used language ituy pilipinas madi yo Infeature... Kayat yo samet ... ti masipat iti napuskot nga Dapan iti Sakak?
@nnayam4144
@nnayam4144 6 ай бұрын
Hiligaynon is as close as bisaya. Because i understand it.
@courageousteen1734
@courageousteen1734 Жыл бұрын
Hmmm, filipino is basically a tagalog language. Even my filipino subject professor hindi gets bakit pinangalanan na Filipino kung saan naman daw all words in filipino books are tagalog.
@moviemania1583
@moviemania1583 Жыл бұрын
malamang di mo naabotan ang pagpalit ng tagalog to filipino national language kaya di mo alam pinagkaiba nila
@katawamagiliw4963
@katawamagiliw4963 Жыл бұрын
@@moviemania1583 so anong pagkakaiba?
@moviemania1583
@moviemania1583 Жыл бұрын
@@katawamagiliw4963 sa alphabet mas maraming letra, may english, spanish at ibat ibang local langguage ang kasama sa Filipino language, siguro di mo rin naabutan ang panahon na tagalog pa ang national language
@sagadabeans
@sagadabeans Жыл бұрын
The reason is political. It's a rebrand of Tagalog to make it more palatable to other regions as a national language.
@honusblanco1259
@honusblanco1259 Жыл бұрын
Why blindfolded?
@GG-ws6lz
@GG-ws6lz Жыл бұрын
Ilonggo is a native of Iloilo. The language is Hiligaynon.
@inf4mousvloglife1572
@inf4mousvloglife1572 Жыл бұрын
Bisaya in Cebu called Cebuano, bisaya in Mindanao is different from Cebuano, Cebuano bisaya is hard tune, and Mindanao bisaya is soft, but slightly similar.
@johnmichaelcanares2633
@johnmichaelcanares2633 Жыл бұрын
Also Mindanao bisaya is slightly monotone and fast, it's like we are eating our words. The most chill bisaya is from Bohol and Leyte. Cebuano bisaya has a lot of up and down intonations, for example when they say "kayasa do!" Cebuanos speak like that for the most part I notice. I know because I'm Iliganon and I live in Cebu for almost 20 years now.
@fernandocruz4877
@fernandocruz4877 Жыл бұрын
@@johnmichaelcanares2633 Hiligaynon is most soft spoken dialect in PH. Walang diin sa dulo😄✌️
@moviemania1583
@moviemania1583 Жыл бұрын
the variations of this cebuano languages is what we called dialects, that is the same in luzon area which has also many tagalog dialects like the difference in tagalog of metro manila and its neighboring provinces
@inf4mousvloglife1572
@inf4mousvloglife1572 Жыл бұрын
@@moviemania1583 Yes we all know that, what is the definition of those Language or Dialects?
@realemperorkuzco
@realemperorkuzco Жыл бұрын
@@inf4mousvloglife1572 Languages are distinc from one another and are not mutually intelligeble. For example, a Spanish cannot fully comprehend a Portuguese speaker. Dialects, are mutually intelligeble--a Mexican could understand the Spanish from Spain, Argentina, Equitorial Guinea, etc; likewise, Bisaya speakers can understand people from Davao to Zamboanga to Cebu, etc. Languages are different. A Tagalog speaker cannot understand someone speaking Bisaya and vice versa, languages may be similar--but similarities show a common ancestor and that's it. Dialects, are a "sub-lineage" of the same language, like British or American English.
@yobmas722
@yobmas722 2 ай бұрын
as a native cebuano speaker I can understand waray waray more than hiligaynon...
@kevinbasence1147
@kevinbasence1147 Жыл бұрын
Ask them about every curse word from those languages and Ill definitely know.
@gon_freecs4030
@gon_freecs4030 Жыл бұрын
Have you noticed, lahat ng language sa Pinas laging may halong English. Wala lang, share ko lang 😅
@ellengraceesteban334
@ellengraceesteban334 Жыл бұрын
the lemonade 😭😭
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