Central Bikol language
Bikol | |
---|---|
Central Bikol | |
bicolano central | |
Native to | Philippines |
Region | Bicol |
Native speakers |
2.5 million (1990 census)[1] 7th most spoken native language in the Philippines[2] |
Austronesian
| |
Latin (Bikol alphabet) Bikol Braille Historically Baybayin | |
Official status | |
Official language in | Regional language in the Philippines |
Regulated by | Commission on the Filipino Language |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | bcl |
Central Bikol is the most-spoken language in the Bicol region of southern Luzon, Philippines. It belongs to Coastal Bikol grouping along with Viracnon. It is spoken in the northern and western part of Camarines Sur, second congressional district of Camarines Norte, eastern part of Albay, northeastern part of Sorsogon, San Pascual town in Masbate, and southwestern part of Catanduanes. The standard Sprachraum form is based on the Canaman dialect.
Bikol dialects
Bikol-Naga, a dialect of Coastal Bikol based in Canaman, Camarines Sur and the foundation of Standard Bikol, along with Bikol-Legazpi, based in Legazpi City, are plainly understood by most Bikol speakers. It is spoken in the first and second districts of Camarines Sur (except in Del Gallego, where residents are mostly Tagalog speakers) and in San Pascual, Masbate.
Bikol-Legazpi is spoken in the eastern coast of Albay and northern Sorsogon.
Other common dialects include Bikol-Daet, spoken in Daet and adjacent towns in Camarines Norte, and Bikol-Partido, spoken in the 4th District of Camarines Sur and in Virac, San Andres and southern part of Caramoran in Catanduanes.
Dialectal comparison with other Bikol languages
Coastal Bikol | Bikol-Naga dialect | Bikol-Partido dialect | Bikol-Legazpi dialect | Bikol-Virac dialect | Bikol-Daet dialect | Riŋkonāda Language (Inland Bikol) |
Sorsoganon Language (Bisakol) |
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Tâdaw ta dae luminayog an bayong ni Pedro dawà na dae nin kandado su hawla? | Tanô daw ta dai naglayog an gamgam ni Pedro dawà na mayò nin kandado si hawla? | Hadaw ta `e naglayog an gamgam ni Pedro maski `e nin kandado su hawla? | Natà dai naglayog an bayong ni Pedro maski daing kandado su hawla? | Ngata ta dai naglayog an gamgam ni Pedro maski dai nin kandado an hawla? | Bakin dai naglayog an gamgam ni Pedro maski mayong kandado si hawla? | Ta'onō / Ta ŋātâ ta dirî naglayog adtoŋ bayoŋ ni Pedro dāwâ ədâ kandādo su laə̄man? | Nakay daw kay dire naglayog an tamsi ni Pedro maski wara kandado an hawla? |
Like other Philippine languages, Bikol has a number of loanwords, largely Spanish as a result of 333 years of Spanish rule in the Philippines. This includes suerte (luck), karne (carne, meat), imbestigador (investigador, investigator), litro (liter), pero (but), and krimen (crimen, crime). Another source of loanwords is Sanskrit, with words like hade (king) and karma.
Bikol Central edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
Grammar
Pronouns
Absolutive | Ergative | Oblique | |
---|---|---|---|
1st person singular | ako | ko | sakuya, sako, kanako, saako |
2nd person singular | ika, ka | mo | saimo, si-mo, kanimo |
3rd person singular | siya, iya | niya | saiya, kaniya |
1st person plural inclusive | kita | nyato, ta | satuya, sato, kanato, saato |
1st person plural exclusive | kami | nyamo, mi | samuya, samo, kanamo, saamo |
2nd person plural | kamo | nindo | saindo, kaninyo, saiyo |
3rd person plural | sinda | ninda | sainda, kanira |
Particles
Like many other Philippine languages, Bikol has a rich set of discourse particles.
- bagá – expresses doubt or hesitation
- bayâ – giving a chance to someone; polite insisting
- daa – (Tagalog: daw) quoting information from a secondary source
- daw – (Tagalog: ba/kaya) interrogative particle
- garo – (Tagalog: mukhang, parang) likeness or similitude. English: "It looks like, it's as if."
- gáyo – "exactly"
- daing gáyo – "not exactly, not really"
- gayód / nanggayod – (Tagalog: bakâ) "maybe, could be"
- giráray / liwá – (Tagalog: [m]uli) "again"
- kutá-na / kutâ – "I hope (something did / did not happen" ; "If only ..." (conditionality of past events)
- lang / lámang / saná – (Tagalog: lang) "only, just"
- lugód – hoping that something will happen, or expressing surrender
- man – (Tagalog: din, rin) "also" or "ever" (such as ano man 'whatever' and siisay man 'whoever')
- mú-na / ngó-na – (Tagalog: muna) "first" or "yet"
- na – (Tagalog: na) "now" or "already"
- naman – (Tagalog: naman) "again"
- nanggad / mananggad – (Tagalog: talaga, nga) "really, truly, absolutely" (adds a sense of certainty)
- nyako – "I said"
- ngani – expresses fate ("This is helpless") or a plea for others not to insist
- ngantig – reports something one has said to a third person
- ngapit – "then," "in case," "during/while" (span of time)
- ngaya – politeness in requesting information ("so," "let's see")
- pa – (Tagalog: pa) "still"
- palán – (Tagalog: pala) expresses surprise or sudden realization
- po – (Tagalog: po) politeness marker; "tabí" in some Bikol dialects
- túlos / túlos-túlos – (Tagalog: agad-agad) "immediately, right away"
See also
Notes
- ↑ Bikol reference at Ethnologue (17th ed., 2013)
- ↑ Philippine Census, 2000. Table 11. Household Population by Ethnicity, Sex and Region: 2000
References
- Lobel, Jason William, Wilmer Joseph S Tria, and Jose Maria Z Carpio. 2000. An satuyang tataramon / A study of the Bikol language. Naga City, Philippines: Lobel & Tria Partnership, Co.: Holy Rosary Minor Seminary.
External links
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