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  1. ricultural skill, the assiduous Hanunoo farmer cultivate a surprising number of food and other economic plants in their hillside swiddens ("kaingins," or fired clearings). The Hanunoo also garden, gather wild and protected forest foods, hunt, fish, trap; and raise chickens, pigs, and humped cattle (zebu). But swidden activi­ ties predominate.

    • Written Hanunó'o
    • Notable Features
    • Abugidas / Syllabic Alphabets

    Nowadays Hanunó'o is written mainly with a version of the Latin alphabet. There is also a Hanunó'o, which has been used since the 14th century AD and is thought to have developed from the Kawi script of Java, Bali and Sumatra. The Hanunó'o script is used to write love songs or ʼambāhan, and also for correspondence. About 70% of the Hanunó'o are abl...

    Type of writing system: Abugida / Syllabic Alphabetin which each consonant has an inherent vowel [a]. Other vowels are indicated by diacritics.
    Syllable final consonants are not written and readers have to use context to work out which final consonants are intended.
    Script family: Proto-Sinaitic, Phoenician, Aramaic, Brāhmī, Pallava, Kawi, Baybayin, Hanunó'o

    Ahom, Aima, Arleng, Badagu, Badlit, Basahan, Balinese, Balti-A, Balti-B, Batak, Baybayin, Bengali, Bhaiksuki, Bhujimol, Bilang-bilang, Bima, Blackfoot, Brahmi, Buhid, Burmese, Carrier, Chakma, Cham, Cree, Dehong Dai, Devanagari, Dham Lipi, Dhankari / Sirmauri, Ditema, Dives Akuru, Dogra, Ethiopic, Evēla Akuru, Fox, Fraser, Gond, Goykanadi, Grantha,...

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  3. Sep 30, 2020 · One hundred miles south of Manila and at the northern end of the Sulu Sea lies Mindoro, the seventh largest island in the Philippines. On the fertile coastal plains of this island live Tagalog and Bisayan farmers (Christian Filipinos) while in the rugged and largely unknown interior live at least eight different groups of pagan mountaineers known collectively as Mangyan.

  4. Hanun ó o. The 7,000 Hanun ó o (Bulalakao, Hampangan, Hanono-o, Mangyan) live in an area of 800 square kilometers at the southern end of Mindoro Island (12 ° 30 ′ N, 121 ° 10 ′ E), in the Philippines. They speak an Austronesian language, and most are literate, using an Indic-derived script that they write on bamboo.

  5. 4. One who has a knowledge of the language of the Hanunoo-Mangyans as it is used in their daily conversation, will be able to understand very little of the language that is used in the ambahan. The language used in the ambahan is different from the spoken language, though many a word used widely in the

  6. The Hanuno'o live inland from the southernmost tip of Mindoro. In the 1970s, the Hanuno'o numbered 6,000 out of a total of 20-30,000 Mangyan, already a minority on an island inhabited by 300,000 Tagalog and Visayan settlers. One 2000 estimate numbers the Hanuno'o 13,000. According to the 2000 census, 7,702 identified themselves as Hanuno'o in ...

  7. This map is available with a Standard plan. See exactly where Hanunoo is spoken, plus: Maps by country, showing all of the languages together; All 138 of our expanded country PDFs$30,000 when bought separately; And more!

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