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  2. Languages of the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_the_Philippines

    Additionally, the Arabic script is used in the Muslim areas in the southern Philippines. Tagalog and Bisaya are the most commonly spoken native language groups. Filipino and English are the official languages of the Philippines.

  3. Philippine Hokkien - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_Hokkien

    Philippine Hokkien[f] is a dialect of the Hokkien language of the Southern Min branch of Min Chinese descended directly from Old Chinese of the Sinitic family, primarily spoken vernacularly by Chinese Filipinos in the Philippines, where it serves as the local Chinese lingua franca [9][10] within the overseas Chinese community in the Philippines and acts as the heritage language of a majority ...

  4. Mandarin Chinese in the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandarin_Chinese_in_the...

    Mandarin Chinese [a][b] is the primary formal Chinese language taught academically to students in Chinese Filipino private schools (historically established by and meant for Chinese Filipinos) [4] and additionally across other private and public schools, universities, and institutions in the Philippines, [5] especially as the formal written ...

  5. Chinese Filipinos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_Filipinos

    Chinese Filipinos[ a ] (sometimes referred as Filipino Chinese in the Philippines) are Filipinos of Chinese descent with ancestry mainly from Fujian, [ 4 ] but are typically born and raised in the Philippines. [ 4 ] Chinese Filipinos are one of the largest overseas Chinese communities in Southeast Asia. [ 5 ]

  6. Hokkien - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hokkien

    Quite a few words from the variety of Old Chinese spoken in the state of Wu, where the ancestral language of Min and Wu dialect families originated, and later words from Middle Chinese as well, have retained the original meanings in Hokkien, while many of their counterparts in Mandarin Chinese have either fallen out of daily use, have been ...

  7. Tagalog language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tagalog_language

    A Tagalog speaker, recorded in South Africa. Tagalog (/ təˈɡɑːlɒɡ /, tə-GAH-log; [3] [tɐˈɣaː.loɡ]; Baybayin: ᜆᜄᜎᜓᜄ᜔) is an Austronesian language spoken as a first language by the ethnic Tagalog people, who make up a quarter of the population of the Philippines, and as a second language by the majority. Its standardized form, officially named Filipino, is the national ...

  8. Filipino language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filipino_language

    The Philippines is a multilingual state with 175 living languages originating and spoken by various ethno-linguistic groups. Many of these languages descend from a common Malayo-Polynesian language due to the Austronesian migration from Taiwan. The common Malayo-Polynesian language split into different languages, and usually through the Malay ...

  9. Amoy dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amoy_dialect

    The spoken Amoy dialect preserves many of the sounds and words from Old Chinese. However, the vocabulary of Amoy was also influenced in its early stages by the Minyue languages spoken by the ancient Minyue peoples. [10] Spoken Amoy is known for its extensive use of nasalization. Unlike Mandarin, the Amoy dialect distinguishes between voiced and voiceless unaspirated initial consonants ...