Learn Tagalog - Lesson 1 (Basic Greetings)
8 years ago in #languages by expatlove (53)
$11.53
- Past Payouts $11.53
- - Author $8.69
- - Curators $2.84
41 votes
- val-a: $6.10
- val-b: $1.71
- clayop: $1.36
- pharesim: $1.19
- kushed: $0.43
- donkeypong: $0.29
- steemship: $0.10
- anwenbaumeister: $0.09
- curie: $0.08
- teamsteem: $0.04
- movievertigo: $0.04
- deanliu: $0.02
- asmolokalo: $0.01
- jaewoocho: $0.01
- nextgen622: $0.01
- awesomenyl: $0.01
- biophil: $0.01
- funnyman: $0.01
- fubar-bdhr: $0.01
- masteryoda: $0.00
- and 21 more
Very nice =)
Another great language I should learn to speak!
Thanks. Interestingly, "Filipino" (Tagalog) is a second language to many people in the Philippines. Down in Cebu, for example, people speak Cebuano in everyday life. Up north, people speak Kapampangan, Pangasinense, and Ilokano, just to name a few of the languages that are around here. Where I'm at, it's all Tagalog.
Oh God...is very hard!!! Great idea! (;
Just a little tip guys, " ikinagagalak " is no longer used,not in the last 40 years.Majority of tagalog-speaking Filipinos now usesTag-lish, a combination of Tagalog and English. Before in our Filipino subject in school,root words of the language was being taught but not necessarily used nor applicable in daily conversations.
Good effort @expatlove
@immarojas, good point. I think I've heard it used a couple of times, though...or maybe I was dreaming. Anyway, I should probably do a separate post on Filipino English. For example, my asawa always tells me to "open the light" or "close the light." When I first got here, I was like, "Huh? What?" Now I say it myself. :-)
Lolsss one word means a lot of things. Am living with visaya people, some words are in filipino yet mean different things. Have fun!