Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In Philippine languages, kabayan or kababayan means "fellow Filipino, countryman, or townmate". It is used throughout the Philippines and throughout the various Philippine languages. Literally, ka-means "co-" and bayan means "town". In the narrow sense, kababayan means a fellow from the same town.
Kabayan Bikin Ulah (2002, komik kompilasi) Three South East Asian plays: Si Kabayan by Utuy Sontani, by Utuy Tatang Sontani; Usman Awang; Joo For Lee; Book Language: English Publisher: Kuala Lumpur, Tenggara, 1970. Paradoks cerita-cerita si Kabayan by Yakob Sumarjo, Book Language: Indonesian, Publisher: Bandung : Kelir, 2008.
Mabuhay (lit. ' to live ') is a Filipino greeting, usually expressed as Mabuhay!, which means "long live!".The term is also occasionally used for toasts during celebrations to mean "cheers".
The name Kabayan has been used in the Philippines by PAGASA in the Western Pacific. Kabayan means “countrymen” in Filipino language and is also the nickname of the former Vice President Noli de Castro. Typhoon Etau (2003) (T0310, 11W, Kabayan) – struck Japan; Typhoon Peipah (2007) (T0721, 21W, Kabayan) – struck the Philippines
Kabayan is the nickname for Noli de Castro, a Filipino broadcaster who served as the 12th Vice President of the Philippines. Kabayan may also refer to: Kabayan (radio program), a radio program hosted by Noli de Castro; Kabayan, Benguet, a municipality in the Philippines; Kabayan (fictional character), a Sudanese folklore character
The Ibaloi language (ësël ivadoy, /əsəl ivaˈdoj/) belongs to the Malayo-Polynesian branch of the Austronesian languages family. It is closely related to the Pangasinan language, which is spoken primarily in central and southern Benguet, and western Nueva Vizcaya and eastern La Union. Its dialects include Daklan, Kabayan, and Bokod.
The program, styled in the lines of U.S. news magazine programs 60 Minutes and Dateline, was first broadcast on August 20, 1988, with its first anchor Kabayan (transl. compatriot or fellow countryman) Noli de Castro along with the live studio audience.
The native language of the Ibaloi people is Ibaloi, also known as Inibaloi or Nabaloi. [2] It has three dialects: Bokod, Daklan and Kabayan. [5] The Ibaloi often also speak Ilocano and Tagalog as a second language.