Slash Tagalog


Download Slash Tagalog PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Slash Tagalog book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Diccionario Ingles-Espa_ol-Tagalog Con partes de la oracion y pronunciacion figurada


Diccionario Ingles-Espa_ol-Tagalog Con partes de la oracion y pronunciacion figurada

Author: Sofronio G. Calderón

language: en

Publisher: Library of Alexandria

Release Date:


DOWNLOAD





Tagalog Borrowings and Cognates


Tagalog Borrowings and Cognates

Author: Jean-Paul G. POTET

language: en

Publisher: Lulu.com

Release Date: 2016-06-25


DOWNLOAD





Tagalog, spoken in Manila and the surrounding provinces, Luzon, Philippines, is a major language of the western branch of the Austronesian family. The bulk of this book is devoted to parallel words also found in Malay, a member of the same branch. These words are either cognates descending from Proto-Austronesian or borrowings from the same foreign languages. Other cognates were found in Javanese, Malagasy, Tahitian and even Siamese. The last third of the book deals with Sanskrit, Arabic, Spanish, Chinese, Japanese and English loanwords.

Arabic and Persian Loanwords in Tagalog


Arabic and Persian Loanwords in Tagalog

Author: Jean-Paul G. POTET

language: en

Publisher: Lulu.com

Release Date: 2013


DOWNLOAD





The few, and generally obsolete Tagalog words of Arabic and/or Persian origin that can be found in old and modern dictionaries are fragments from a period when they must have been more numerous, although their number cannot ever have been very large. Some illustrate how Manila was an outpost of the Bornean polity based in Brunei, itself a part of the Indo-Javanese system, while others point at direct contacts with traders who spoke some varieties of Arabic, but were probably Indians, Persians, Armenians from Persia or even Turks. Thus these terms entered Tagalog over a very long period that lasted until the 19th Century.