Is Tagalog Spanish based?

Tagalog is one of the most widely spoken languages in the world. Although it originated in the Philippines, it contains traces of other languages, such as English and Spanish.
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Is Filipino based on Spanish?

The answer is no. Most Filipinos do not speak or understand Spanish, and the Filipino language is not close enough to Spanish for significant mutual comprehension (though there are many loan words from Spanish and some grammatical influence).
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What language is Tagalog based on?

Tagalog is a Central Philippine language within the Austronesian language family. Being Malayo-Polynesian, it is related to other Austronesian languages, such as Malagasy, Javanese, Indonesian, Malay, Tetum (of Timor), and Yami (of Taiwan).
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Is Tagalog a Spanish type?

Tagalog is not a dialect of Spanish. It's not even in a closely-related language group. Tagalog is in the Austronesian language family, while Spanish is Indo-European. Tagalog has a lot of Spanish loanwords, as a result of the Philippines being a Spanish colony for over 300 years.
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Does Tagalog have Spanish influence?

Language. One of the most obvious ways that the era of the Spanish Philippines still affects the country is with language. About one-third (4,000) of the words in Tagalog are of Spanish origin, and around 6,000 words in other Filipino languages come from Spanish.
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FILIPINO vs SPANISH Language Similarities (HILARIOUS)



Do Filipinos have Spanish blood?

Filipinos are predominantly of Malay descent, frequently with Chinese and sometimes American or Spanish ancestry. Many Filipinos have Spanish names because of a 19th-century Spanish decree that required them to use Spanish surnames, or last names.
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Which Filipino language is closest to Spanish?

Chavacano or Chabacano [tʃabaˈkano] is a group of Spanish-based creole language varieties spoken in the Philippines. The variety spoken in Zamboanga City, located in the southern Philippine island group of Mindanao, has the highest concentration of speakers.
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Are Filipinos Spanish or Hispanic?

Are they considered Hispanic? People with ancestries in Brazil, Portugal and the Philippines do not fit the federal government's official definition of “Hispanic” because the countries are not Spanish-speaking.
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What percent of Tagalog is Spanish?

Influence on the languages of the Philippines

There are approximately 4,000 Spanish words in Tagalog (between 20% and 33% of Tagalog words), and around 6,000 Spanish words in Visayan and other Philippine languages.
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Why do Filipinos have Spanish names?

While many Filipinos today believe that their Spanish-sounding surname is an indication of a Spanish ancestor somewhere up in the family tree, in reality most surnames in the Philippines can be traced back to only 1850, the year the 1849 Claveria Surname decree was enacted.
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What languages is Tagalog a mix of?

Tagalog language, member of the Central Philippine branch of the Austronesian (Malayo-Polynesian) language family and the base for Pilipino, an official language of the Philippines, together with English. It is most closely related to Bicol and the Bisayan (Visayan) languages—Cebuano, Hiligaynon (Ilongo), and Samar.
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What ethnicity is Tagalog?

The Tagalog people (Tagalog: Mga Tagalog; Baybayin: ᜋᜅ ᜆᜄᜎᜓᜄ᜔) are the largest ethnolinguistic group in the Philippines, numbering at around 30 million. An Austronesian people, the Tagalog have a well developed society due to their cultural heartland, Manila, being the capital city of the Philippines.
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What is Tagalog influenced by?

Over the course of its development, Tagalog (and other languages of the Philippines) have been influenced by Chinese, Japanese, Spanish, English, and many other languages, in trade and in occupations by various countries.
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Are Filipino people Spanish descent?

This perceived invisibility of the Philippines in the Hispanic world has had significant impacts on Filipino self-perception. While a sizeable number of Filipinos have Spanish surnames following an 1849 decree that Hispanicised Filipino surnames, chances are most people have a tenuous, or no link to Spanish ancestry.
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Why do Filipinos not speak Spanish anymore?

Throughout the 20th century, the use of Spanish declined, particularly after the destruction of the Spanish stronghold in the Battle of Manila. The country's subsequent modernization and World War II left English the nation's most common language.
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What race is Filipino mixed?

What is 'Filipino'? We are proud of our heritage at the rim of East Asia, the meeting point of the many Asian groups, as well as Europeans from Spain. Our culture even 100 years ago was already a mix —of Malay, Chinese, Hindu, Arab, Polynesian and Spanish, with maybe some English, Japanese and African thrown in.
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Is it easy for Filipinos to learn Spanish?

It's easier for us

Filipinos definitely have an edge in learning Spanish. The fact that there are over 4,000 Spanish loan words in the Filipino dictionary, it's a lot quicker to bank the words in the vault. Though with slight difference in spelling, some Spanish and Filipino words sound very much alike.
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How long did Spain rule the Philippines?

Indeed, Catholicism came to profoundly shape life in many parts of the archipelago that eventually became the Philippines as Spain spread its rule there over the course of more than 300 years from 1565 to 1898.
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Where do Filipinos originate from?

Philippines. the Philippines collectively are called Filipinos. The ancestors of the vast majority of the population were of Malay descent and came from the Southeast Asian mainland as well as from what is now Indonesia.
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What is Spanish last name in Philippines?

The most common Filipino family names often have a Spanish origin, e.g. SANTOS, REYES, CRUZ, BAUTISTA, GARCIA. Some surnames may have the prefix 'de' or 'del' (e.g. DE CASTRO, DEL ROSARIO).
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What is the genetic makeup of Filipino?

The most frequently occurring Y-DNA haplogroups among modern Filipinos are haplogroup O1a-M119, which has been found with maximal frequency among the indigenous peoples of Nias, the Mentawai Islands, northern Luzon, the Batanes, and Taiwan, and Haplogroup O2-M122, which is found with high frequency in many populations ...
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What do Spanish call Filipino?

The indigenous Filipino population of the Philippines were referred to as Indios.
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What is the broken Spanish language in Philippines?

“Native Spanish speakers might call Chabacano a Broken Language,” he continues, explaining how Chabacano is sometimes perceived negatively amongst the international Spanish speaking community. Chabacano is a language that evolved to be easy to speak, a common bridge between people of very different cultural histories.
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Did Spain own the Philippines?

The Spanish colonial period of the Philippines began when explorer Ferdinand Magellan came to the islands in 1521 and claimed it as a colony for the Spanish Empire. The period lasted until the Philippine Revolution in 1898.
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