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  2. Filipino alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filipino_alphabet

    The modern Filipino alphabet is made up of 28 letters, which includes the entire 26-letter set of the ISO basic Latin alphabet, the Spanish Ñ, and the Ng. The Ng digraph came from the Pilipino Abakada alphabet of the Fourth Republic. Today, the modern Filipino alphabet may also be used to write all autochthonous languages of the Philippines ...

  3. Filipino orthography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filipino_orthography

    For the distinction between [ ], / / and , see IPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters. Filipino orthography ( Filipino: Ortograpiyang Filipino) specifies the correct use of the writing system of the Filipino language, the national and co- official language of the Philippines . In 2013, the Komisyon sa Wikang Filipino released the ...

  4. Tagalog language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tagalog_language

    Tagalog, like other Philippines languages today, is written using the Latin alphabet. Prior to the arrival of the Spanish in 1521 and the beginning of their colonization in 1565, Tagalog was written in an abugida—or alphasyllabary—called Baybayin. This system of writing gradually gave way to the use and propagation of the Latin alphabet as ...

  5. Suyat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suyat

    Eskayan script is the constructed script of the auxiliary Eskayan language of the island of Bohol in the Philippines. Like Yugtun and Fox script, it is based on cursive Latin. The script was developed approximately 1920–1937. "Although the script is used for representing Visayan (Cebuano)—a widely used language of the southern Philippines ...

  6. Abakada alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abakada_alphabet

    The Abakada alphabet was an "indigenized" Latin alphabet adopted for the Tagalog-based Wikang Pambansa (now Filipino) in 1939. [1] The alphabet, which contains 20 letters, was introduced in the grammar book developed by Lope K. Santos for the newly-designated national language based on Tagalog. [2] It was officially adopted by the then ...

  7. Philippine English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_English

    v. t. e. Philippine English (similar and related to American English) is a variety of English native to the Philippines, including those used by the media and the vast majority of educated Filipinos and English learners in the Philippines from adjacent Asian countries.

  8. Postal addresses in the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postal_addresses_in_the...

    Address elements [ edit ] Philippine addresses always contain the name of the sender, the building number and thoroughfare , the barangay where the building is located, the city or municipality where the barangay is located and, in most cases, the province where the city or municipality is located.

  9. Proto-Philippine language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Philippine_language

    Proto-Philippine. The Proto-Philippine language is a reconstructed ancestral proto-language of the Philippine languages, a proposed subgroup of the Austronesian languages which includes all languages within the Philippines (except for the Sama–Bajaw languages) as well as those within the northern portions of Sulawesi in Indonesia. [ 1][ 2][ 3 ...