Global Information Lookup Global Information

Sambalic languages information


Sambalic
EthnicitySambal
Geographic
distribution
Zambales, Bolinao, Anda, Infanta, Olongapo
Linguistic classificationAustronesian
  • Malayo-Polynesian
    • Philippine
      • Central Luzon
        • Sambalic
Proto-languageProto-Sambalic
Subdivisions
  • Abellen
  • Ambala
  • Bolinao
  • Botolan
  • Antsi (Mag-Antsi)
  • Indi (Mag-Indi)
  • Mariveleño
  • Sambali
Glottologsamb1319

The Sambalic languages are a part of the Central Luzon language family spoken by the Sambals, an ethnolinguistic group on the western coastal areas of Central Luzon and the Zambales mountain ranges.

and 26 Related for: Sambalic languages information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8061 seconds.)

Sambalic languages

Last Update:

The Sambalic languages are a part of the Central Luzon language family spoken by the Sambals, an ethnolinguistic group on the western coastal areas of...

Word Count : 664

Abellen language

Last Update:

other Sambalic languages, but between other Ayta languages, it is around 70% similar. This language is a CV (consonant and vowel) and CVC language, although...

Word Count : 764

Indi language

Last Update:

The Indi language or Mag-indi (or Mag-Indi Ayta) is a Sambalic language with around 5,000 speakers. It is spoken within Philippine Aeta communities in...

Word Count : 190

Bolinao language

Last Update:

widely spoken Sambalic language. Most Bolinao speakers can speak Pangasinan and/or Ilocano. Ethnologue reports 510 monolinguals for this language. Bolinao...

Word Count : 293

Ambala language

Last Update:

Ambala is a Sambalic language spoken in the Philippines. It has more than 2,000 speakers[full citation needed] and is spoken within Aeta communities in...

Word Count : 152

Antsi language

Last Update:

The Antsi (Anchi) language or Mag-antsi (also Mag-Anchi Ayta) is a Sambalic language with around 4,200 speakers. It is spoken within Philippine Aeta communities...

Word Count : 197

Sambal people

Last Update:

Ilocano, Bolinao, and Pangasinense. The Sambalic languages are most closely related to the Kapampangan language and Sinauna and archaic form of Tagalog...

Word Count : 1368

Sambal language

Last Update:

Sambal or Sambali is a Sambalic language spoken primarily in the Zambal municipalities of Santa Cruz, Candelaria, Masinloc, Palauig, and Iba, in the Pangasinense...

Word Count : 1372

Botolan language

Last Update:

a Sambalic language spoken by 32,867 (SIL 2000) Sambal, primarily in the Zambal municipalities of Botolan and Cabangan in the Philippines. Language status...

Word Count : 484

Zambales

Last Update:

to Tagalog. Sambal & Sambalic languages as a whole are most closely related to Kapampangan. More than 119,126 spoke other languages as their parent tongue...

Word Count : 3885

Philippine Negrito languages

Last Update:

Dumagat (Sinauna Tagalog) Kapampangan Sambalic languages Ayta languages Sambal languages Central Philippine languages Mamanwa Tagalog Bikol Bisayan Mansaka...

Word Count : 1150

Central Bikol

Last Update:

to be the home of Central Luzon languages such as Kapampangan in Pampanga and southern Tarlac, and Sambalic languages in Zambales province. Because of...

Word Count : 1622

Pangasinan

Last Update:

Languages not native in Pangasinan (aside from Ilocano) are spoken by other minority ethnic groups, such as Kapampangan which is related to Sambalic languages...

Word Count : 6409

Bolinao

Last Update:

a former barangay of Bolinao. The Bolinao language is closely related to Sambal, both are Sambalic languages. Bolinao was part of the province of Zambales...

Word Count : 1632

Kapampangan language

Last Update:

language'). Kapampangan is one of the Central Luzon languages of the Austronesian language family. Its closest relatives are the Sambalic languages of...

Word Count : 5747

Ilocano people

Last Update:

second languages, as well as other local languages spoken in North Luzon and Central Luzon (the latter include Kapampangan, Pangasinan, and Sambalic languages...

Word Count : 13581

Central Luzon languages

Last Update:

The Central Luzon languages are a group of languages belonging to the Philippine languages. These are predominantly spoken in the western portions of Central...

Word Count : 249

Pampanga

Last Update:

speak Kapampangan, which is one of the Central Luzon languages along with the Sambalic languages. Tagalog is generally spoken in areas bordering Bulacan...

Word Count : 8218

Malay language

Last Update:

various other Malayic languages. According to Ethnologue 16, several of the Malayic varieties they currently list as separate languages, including the Orang...

Word Count : 4658

Ethnic groups in the Philippines

Last Update:

inappropriate or derogatory by fellow Aeta of northern Luzon. The Aeta speak Sambalic languages, which are part of the Central Luzon family. The Batak are a group...

Word Count : 26005

Tagalog language

Last Update:

official languages, alongside English. Tagalog is closely related to other Philippine languages, such as the Bikol languages, the Bisayan languages, Ilocano...

Word Count : 8090

Njav language

Last Update:

Franjieh, Michael; Schnell, Stefan (eds.), The Languages of Vanuatu: Unity and Diversity, Studies in the Languages of Island Melanesia, Canberra: Asia Pacific...

Word Count : 93

ABP

Last Update:

Pacense, a Spanish basketball team based in Badajoz Abellen language, a Sambalic language of the Philippines Apostolic Bible Polyglot The title of Archbishop...

Word Count : 284

Central Pacific languages

Last Update:

The Central Pacific languages, also known as Fijian–Polynesian languages, are a branch of the Oceanic languages spoken in Fiji and Polynesia. Ross et...

Word Count : 126

Cenderawasih languages

Last Update:

The Cenderawasih languages, approximately synonymous with West New Guinea languages, are a branch of Austronesian languages of Indonesia, found in the...

Word Count : 66

Javanese language

Last Update:

possibility that Greater North Borneo languages are closely related to many other western Indonesian languages, including Javanese. Blust's suggestion...

Word Count : 7029

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net