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Pangasinan language

Pangasinán is one of the twelve major languages in the Philippines and is spoken exclusively in the province of Pangasinan, along with Ilocano. An alternate name for Pangasinán is Panggalatók, although this name can be construed as pejorative. It is generally considered the most grammatically complex and difficult of the Philippine languages. Learning Pangasinan as an English speaker is further complicated by the unavailability of reference materials such as grammar books. While such books have been published in the past, they are all currently out of print.

Despite it being the first language for over a million people (some estimate the number of speakers nearer to two million), very few printed materials are available in Pangasinan, most of which are evangelical in nature. This is due to the fact that most Pangasinans are multilingual, knowing Tagalog, English, and Ilocano, in addition to their native tongue. This tendency to prefer speaking the more dominant languages in Pangasinan province has led to the decline of the Pangasinense-speaking population.

Pangasinan
Spoken in: Philippines
Region: Central Luzon
First language speakers: 1.3 million
Second language speakers: -
Ranking: Not in top 100
Genetic
classification:
Austronesian

  Malayo-Polynesian
   Western
   Northern Philippine
    Northern Luzon
     South Cordilleran
      Pangasinan

Official status
Official language of: -
Regulated by: -
Language codes
ISO 639-1-
ISO 639-2pag
SILPNG

Numbers

The following lists the numbers from one to ten in English, Tagalog, and Pangasinan.

English Tagalog Pangasinan
one isa sakey
two dalawa duara
three tatlo talora
four apat apatira
five lima limara
six anim anemira
seven pito pitora
eight walo walora
nine siyam siamira
ten sampu samplura

See also

External links

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