Friday, March 13, 2015

Learn ilonggo

 learn Hiligaynon/ilonggo!  

 Most people in south cotabato speak hiligaynon/illonggo here are some basic ilonggo words


Expressions

a-GAY! :  ouch!
AY! :  expression of surprise
AY, a-HAY! / AY A-hay! – expression of pity or dismay
AY, NA-no? :  literally, “huh, what happened?”; expression of surprise at the result of an unexpected or wrong decision
a-YOS! :  alright!
am-BOT? : I don’t know. (innocently)
am-BOT! :  I don’t know! (condescendingly)
ba-LA :  asserting or agreeing with something ; allegedly
da-SON? :  then? / next?
ga-LI^? :  really?
GID / GUID (pronounced GID):  indeed
ha-LA! :  oh! / hullo!
HAM-ot:  amused
HOY! : hey! (considered impolite; the polite way is to address a person by his name or nickname)
HU-o:  yes
HU-o ba-LA:  yes, really / allegedly, yes
HU-o GID:  yes, indeed
IN-di^ ba-LA:  allegedly, no
IN-di^ GID:  no, indeed;  never
ka-NA-mi^:  so nice
TA-pos! :  (it’s) the end! / i’m doomed!
TI^? :  so? / and then?

Ilonggo: Short QueriesWhat:   a-NO

Where:  di-IN
When:  SAN-o
Why:  NGA-a
How:  pa-Ano
How many:  pi-LA / pi-LA ka BI-log / a-NO ka DA-mo^
How much:  pi-La / tag-pi-LA
How long (length):  a-NO ka LA-ba^

Ilonggo: Short Responses

Yes: HU-o
No: IN-di^
Maybe: BA-si^
None: wa-LA^
There is: may A-ra^
I have: may A-ra^ KO
I don’t have: wa-LA^ KO

Ilonggo: Pronunciation

a – AH
e – EH
i – IH
o – O
u – OO
Vowels with the ^ symbol on top are pronounced with a sudden stop (due to character limitations, the ^ symbol is typed right after the vowel with a sudden-stop sound). For example:
la-YA^ – dry / dried
NA-mi^ – nice
KA-lo^ – hat / cap
*Tip: For a more convincing sounding Hiligaynon, the trick is to speak in the famous Negrense or Ilonggo melodious tone.

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