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  1. The Hanunó'o script is used to write love songs or ʼambāhan, and also for correspondence. About 70% of the Hanunó'o are able to read and write their language, and there is at least one person in each family who is literate. The script is also known as Mangyan Baybayin or Surat Mangyan.

  2. Northern Brahmic. Southern Brahmic. v. t. e. Hanunoo ( IPA: [hanunuʔɔ] ), also rendered Hanunó'o, is one of the scripts indigenous to the Philippines and is used by the Mangyan peoples of southern Mindoro to write the Hanunó'o language. [1] [2] It is an abugida descended from the Brahmic scripts, closely related to Sulat Tagalog, and is ...

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  4. Mar 11, 2021 · In his book, Ambahan, published by Far Eastern University, Pastrana’s poems were originally written in English, translated into Filipino by author and poet Danton Remoto, and then transcribed in the script of the Hanunuo Mangyan by the Pinagkausahan sa Daga Ginurang, the recognized council of Hanunuo Mangyan elders.

  5. It can be used for contract, signature and correspondence. Hence, when Postma created the chart in 1986, it was easier for Hanunuo-Mangyans to adopt the script to non-literary writing & communication. Immediately, the Mangyans saw the benefit of the pamudpod-enhanced script for educating their young people.

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  6. the case of the Hanunuo-Mangyan script, the only diacritic marks used are those expressing short vowel “e/i” and “o/u” (Postma, 1974). Buhid e/i o/u be/bi bo/bu ke/ki ko/ku de/di do/du Hanunuo e/i o/u be/bi bo/bu ke/ki ko/ku de/di do/du Figure 1: Samples of the Buhid and Hanunuo Mangyan syllabic scripts with diacritic marks.

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  7. 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.

  8. 11 The Hanunoo, together with the neighboring Buhid Mangyans and the Tag-. banwas from Palawan, are the only people in the Philippines who still use an ancient script, an Indic-derived syllabary, which can be traced back to pre-Spanish times. The ambahan of the Hanunoo-Mangyans of Southern Mindoro 361.

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