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Introductory Filipino Panimulang Filipino. Nenita P. Domingo UCLA. Ma ganda ng umaga. Beautiful morning. Ma ganda ng tanghali . Beautiful noon. Magandang hapon. Beautiful afternoon. Magandang gabi. Ako si Nenita Pambid Domingo Naga galak ako na makilala ka.
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Introductory FilipinoPanimulang Filipino Nenita P. Domingo UCLA
Magandang umaga.Beautiful morning.Magandang tanghali.Beautiful noon. Magandang hapon. Beautiful afternoon. Magandang gabi. Ako si Nenita Pambid Domingo Nagagalak ako na makilala ka.
Taga saan ka?Where are you from? Taga-PILIPINAS ako.I am from the PHILIPPINES. Anong pangalan mo? What is your name? _______ ang pangalan ko. ________ (is) my name.
Nasaan ang Pilipinas? Nandito ang Pilipinas.
Fast Facts: 7,107 islands and isletsFilipino and English are the official languages, but there are 180 regional languages and dialects; Spanish was the official language until 1973300,000 sq. km. (115,831 sq. mi.) total land area91, 983,000 total population (2011)11M overseas Filipinos worldwide 80% Roman Catholic April 1565 claimed by Spain1 May 1898 U.S. invaded Hispanic Philippines12 June 1898 Independence declaredDecember 1898 Spain ceded the Philippines to the U.S. Treaty of Paris US$ 20 M was the market price of the Philippines when the U.S. bought it from Spain 1899-1901 Philippine-American War1935 Philippine Commonwealth1941-1945 Japanese occupation4 July 1946 Philippine independence from U.S.
Educating the Indio Thomasites
1901 to 1903, Taft served as the first civilian Governor-General of the Philippines. 27th U.S. President (March 4, 1909 – March 4, 1913)
Characteristics of the Language • The soul of the language is in its affixation • Content words share one root word • Verbs have aspects, mode, & focus • The preferred word order is Predicate/Subject • Case is crucial: ANG, NG, SA, PARA SA • There are 16 Adverbial Particles (enclitics) • The language uses Markers: noun, direct object, place, past time, future time, plural marker (s, -es in English) • Linkers (-ng, na) connect words • There are plural verbs, adjectives, interrogatives
Root Word Salitang-Ugat • Ganda- root or base word • Gumanda- verb- to become beautiful • Maganda- adjective- beautiful • Kagandahan- noun –beauty • Pagganda- noun- the act of becoming beautiful
Cases ANG NG SA PARA SA • Kumain ako ng manok. I ate the chicken. • Kinain ako ng manok. The chicken ate me. • ANG- in the case of the subject • NG- in the case of the direct object • SA- indicates to or from, place • PARA SA- in the case of the indirect object or one who benefits
7 Focus of the Verb • Actor Focus -um-, mag-, ma, mang-, makapag-, maka, magpa- • Benefactive Focus ipag-, -an, I- • Causative Focus ika-, ikinapag- • Directional Focus -an, -han • Object Focus i-, in- -an/han, pa-in • Instrumental Focus Ipang- • Locative -an/-han; pag-an/-han
Mode of Verb • Indicative: -um-, mag-, ma, I-, in, -an • Social: maki-, paki- • Abilitative ma- • Involuntary ma- • Distributive mang- • Causative magpa-, pa-in • Accidental ma- • Reciprocal mag-an • Feeling ma- • Benefactive i, ipag, -an
Acknowledgement • Fr. Ted Torralba • http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_JldSTmF931M/SUXSU327b-I/AAAAAAAAB-A/jq9OyLMBToQ/s320/EDSA+People+Power+1986.JPG • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_the_Philippines • http://www.hillmanwonders.com/banaue/banaue_rice_photos.htm • http://www.trueknowledge.com/q/what_is_the_population_of_philippines_2011 • http://www.prb.org/pdf/asianamericans.pdf • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_cure_(torture)