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  2. Maka-Diyos, Maka-tao, Makakalikasan at Makabansa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maka-Diyos,_Maka-tao...

    Maka-Diyos, Maka-tao, Makakalikasan at Makabansa ( Filipino for "For God, People, Nature, and Country" [1] or "For the Love of God, People, Nature, and Country" [2]) is the national motto of the Philippines. Derived from the last four lines of the Pledge of Allegiance to the Philippine Flag, it was adopted on February 12, 1998, with the passage ...

  3. Bisalog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bisalog

    Bisalog. Bisalog, also Tagbis, is a portmanteau of the words "Bisaya" and "Tagalog", referring to either a Visayan language or Tagalog being infused with words or expressions from the other. It can also be an informal term for Visayan languages spoken in Mimaropa, or Tagalog dialects infused with words from Visayan languages spoken there, such ...

  4. Philippine English vocabulary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_English_vocabulary

    Philippine English vocabulary. As a historical colony of the United States, the Philippine English lexicon shares most of its vocabulary from American English, but also has loanwords from native languages and Spanish, as well as some usages, coinages, and slang peculiar to the Philippines. Some Philippine English usages are borrowed from or ...

  5. Tanaga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanaga

    Unlike the Ambahan whose length is indefinite, the Tanaga is a seven-syllable quatrain. Poets test their skills at rhyme, meter and metaphor through the Tanaga because is it rhymed and measured, while it exacts skillful use of words to create a puzzle that demands an answer. It was a dying art form, but the Cultural Center of the Philippines ...

  6. Philippine English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippine_English

    v. t. e. Philippine English (similar and related to American English) is a variety of English native to the Philippines, including those used by the media and the vast majority of educated Filipinos and English learners in the Philippines from adjacent Asian countries.

  7. Maranao language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maranao_language

    Maranao language. Maranao ( Filipino: Mëranaw [3]; Kirim: باسا أ مراناو) is an Austronesian language spoken by the Maranao people in the provinces of Lanao del Sur and Lanao del Norte and the cities of Marawi and Iligan City in the Philippines, as well as in Sabah, Malaysia. It is a subgroup of the Danao languages of the Moros in ...

  8. League of Filipino Students - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/League_of_Filipino_Students

    The League of Filipino Students ( Filipino: Kapisanan ng mga Pilipinong Mag-Aaral, abbreviated as LFS) is a student-led national democratic mass organization and movement organized during the martial law era in the Philippines on September 11, 1977. It claims to be the leading anti-imperialist organization of the Filipino youth, under the ...

  9. Tagalog language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tagalog_language

    The amount of English vs. Tagalog varies from the occasional use of English loan words to changing language in mid-sentence. Such code-switching is prevalent throughout the Philippines and in various languages of the Philippines other than Tagalog. [61] Code-mixing also entails the use of foreign words that are "Filipinized" by reforming them ...