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  1. For purposes of communication and instruction, the official languages of the Philippines are Filipino and, until otherwise provided by law, English. The regional languages are the auxiliary official languages in the regions and shall serve as auxiliary media of instruction therein.

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  2. Jan 2, 2024 · Comprehensive list of languages in the Philippines. Overview of 180+ collections of languages and dialects used and spoken in the Philippines

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  4. Studies of the baybayin script reveal two characteristics of the Tagalog language that have passed down into the usage of the national language now known as Filipino. First, there is only one symbol for the letters “d” and “r.” The pronunciation depends on the location of the symbol. At the start of the word, it is pronounced “d ...

  5. While there are indeed many hundreds of dialects in the Philippines, they represent variations of no fewer than 120 distinct languages, and many of these languages maintain greater differences than those between established European languages like French and Spanish.

  6. The languages within the scope of this chapter are those of the Greater Central Philippine subgroup (see Blust 1991 and Zorc, Lobel and Hall this volume), Kalamian (consisting of Agutaynen and Calamian Tagbanwa) and the Bilic subgroup (consisting of Tboli, Blaan and Tiruray).

  7. In this paper, we present our collective effort to gather, annotate, and model various language resources for use in different research projects. This includes those that are available online such as tweets, Wikipedia articles, game chat, online radio, and religious text.

  8. 2.1 Batanic/Bashiic. The northernmost subgroup in the Philippines is Batanic (or “Bashiic”), which consists of the Itbayaten, Ivatan and Ibatan/Babuyan languages spoken on the Batanes Islands off the northern tip of Luzon, and the Yami language of Orchid Island in Taiwan.

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