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  2. In 1613, the Franciscan priest Pedro de San Buenaventura published the first Tagalog dictionary, his Vocabulario de la lengua tagala in Pila, Laguna. The first substantial dictionary of the Tagalog language was written by the Czech Jesuit missionary Pablo Clain in the beginning of the 18th century. Clain spoke Tagalog and used it actively in ...

    • Tagalog Is from China
    • Austronesians Crossed from Taiwan to The Philippines
    • Tagalog Is from Southern Luzon
    • Tagalog Got A Lot of Influence from Spanish
    • Tagalog Was Chosen as A National Language
    • Tagalog Is A de Facto Philippine Lingua Franca
    • Conclusion

    “What did you just say?” you say. Yeah, Tagalog is from China. I’m saying this because you may have heard that Tagalog is an Austronesian language. That means it’s a language of the Austronesian people. But who the heck are the Austronesians? Around 6,000 years ago, these farmers and fishermen from Neolithic southern Mainland China crossed the Taiw...

    The Austronesians were also the first people to bring ocean-going maritime sailing technology. Using their ocean-going sailing technology they spread far and wide in a matter of centuries, from Madagascar, to New Zealand, to the remote Chile’s Easter Island. This is called the Austronesian Expansion. From Taiwan, the Austronesians sailed off to the...

    As early as 900 AD, as the Byzantine Empire flourished, at the prime trading spot of the archipelago, an excellent bay where Pasig river emptied itself, the Kingdom of Tondo (also called the Polity of Tondo) was formed. At this time they were trading with other Southeast Asian kingdoms. This is evidenced by an artifact called the Laguna Copperplate...

    The Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan, flying a flag for Spain arrived in the Philippines in 1521. Later on, his voyage was the to circumnavigate the globe. (It was said there was a Filipino translator on board who possibly joined from Europe, but there are little reliable details on this.) In the succeeding three centuries, the Spanish coloni...

    Skipping ahead to the American Commonwealth times, the Philippine’s 1935 Constitutiondeclared that there be two national languages, “Filipino” and English. First, this paved the way for English to continue its influence on the language. Second, this “created” a new nation language that was suppose to be based on Tagalog. Supposedly, elements from o...

    Today, roughly half of the 110 million in the Philippines speak it as a first or primary language, concentrated in Manila and southern Luzon, but practically all people in the Philippines speak it to some degree. There are a lot of other dialects, such as Bisaya (Cebuano), Ilonggo, Kapampangan. However, if two Filipinos meet each other not knowing ...

    The short of this story – a group of Neolithic farmers in southern China migrated to the cultural melting pot that is Taiwan. From Taiwan, a distinct Austronesian culture emerged. The Austronesians were excellent ocean-going mariners, and their first stop was the Philippines. They spread out throughout the archipelago, displacing earlier migrants. ...

  3. Jan 10, 2024 · Tagalog is believed to have originated from Proto-Philippine or Proto-Malayo-Polynesian languages spoken by early settlers in Southeast Asia. Over time, as these communities interacted with neighboring cultures through trade and migration, linguistic influences began to shape Tagalog into what it is today.

  4. Apr 13, 2024 · Tagalog language, member of the Central Philippine branch of the Austronesian (Malayo-Polynesian) language family and the base for Pilipino, an official language of the Philippines, together with English. It is most closely related to Bicol and the Bisayan (Visayan) languages—Cebuano, Hiligaynon

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The next group of people to have a major affect on the Tagalog language was the Spanish. Beginning in the second half of the 16th Century, catholic friars from Spain began pouring into the Philippines. The Augustinians were the first to come, arriving in 1565. They established the first permanent European residence in the Philippines.

  6. Jun 30, 1999 · The first Indonesians are thought to have come to the Philippines in groups, beginning some 5,000 to 6,000 years ago and again about 1500 B.C. (Bautista). Linguistic evidence connects Tagalog with Bahasa Indonesia as having common roots, so the main root of the modern Filipino languages probably came with these people (although other groups of ...

  7. Article History. Related Topics: Tagalog language. Philippine languages. Pilipino language, standardized form of Tagalog, and one of the two official languages of the Philippines (the other being English). It is a member of the Austronesian language phylum.

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