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The Kapampangan people (Kapampangan: Taung Kapampangan), Pampangueños or Pampangos, are the sixth largest ethnolinguistic group in the Philippines, numbering about 2,784,526 in 2010. [2] They live mainly in the provinces of Pampanga , Bataan and Tarlac , as well as Bulacan , Nueva Ecija and Zambales .
Kapampangan, Capampañgan or Pampangan may refer to: Kapampangan people, of the Philippines; Kapampangan language, their Austronesian language
Reforms of Kapampangan orthography in the Latin script began with the adoption toward the end of Spanish colonial rule of an indigenized orthography. Up until then, Spanish norms were used in writing Kapampangan, which in turn meant that Kapampangan orthography was subject to the succession of reforms made by the Real Academia Española to Spanish orthography.
P. José Palma; Pampanga in the Philippine Revolution; Francis Pangilinan; Manny Pangilinan; Eddie Panlilio; Ronald Pascual; Rolen Paulino; Cherry Pie Picache
However, despite having three to four million speakers, it is threatened by the diaspora of its speakers after the June 1991 eruption of that volcano. Globalization also threatened the language, with the younger generation more on using and speaking Tagalog and English, but promotion and everyday usage boosted the vitality of Kapampangan. [1]
While "Imno ning Kapampangan" was finished in 1982, and the song's ownership passed to the provincial government, [2] it did not become the official song of Pampanga until April 14, 1988, when the Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Pampanga, led by Vice Governor Cielo Macapagal Salgado, passed Resolution No. 18 which institutionalized the song's legal ...
Maslam is an Afro-Asiatic language spoken in northern Cameroon, with a few in southwestern Chad. Dialects are Maslam and Sao. Maslam is in rapid decline. [1]
Kapampangan, Capampáñgan, or Pampangan, is an Austronesian language, and one of the eight major languages of the Philippines. It is the primary and predominant language of the entire province of Pampanga and southern Tarlac , on the southern part of Luzon 's central plains geographic region, where the Kapampangan ethnic group resides.