Good question. Tagalog, also known as Filipino, is one of the national languages of the Philippines. There are two national languages of the Philippines, Tagalog and English.
Both these languages are national lingua francas that practically everyone in the Philippines has some knowledge on. In any city, town or village in the Philippines, you can survive as long as you can communicate in just one of these languages, as any Filipino can speak these two languages, albeit with varying degrees of fluency.
By law, Spanish and Arabic should also be promoted voluntary basis but good luck walking around Manila trying to speak Spanish or Arabic to your taxi driver. And, there are also something like less than two hundred or so dialects officially in the Philippines, but more on that in the future.
So Tagalog is spoken in the Philippines. But what about Tagalog speaking populations in overseas from Philippines shores? It has been consistently re-edited and the most recent edition was put out in When the Philippines fought for independence at the end of the 19th century, it needed to find ways to unify.
The country comprises a number of islands, and there were different languages spoken across them. In , the Biak-na-Bato Constitution was passed, and the writers chose Tagalog as the national language. When a different Philippine Constitution was put in place in , English and Spanish were made the official languages of the country. Later, when the Philippines came under Japanese control during World War II, Tagalog kept its status in the constitution and was promoted throughout the country.
There were a couple other constitutions put in place in the Philippines — in and the most recent in — and each time Tagalog was kept as the official language. The name was shifted, however, first to Pilipino and then to Filipino. Filipino today refers to a standard variety of Tagalog that is used for communication in the Philippines, whereas Tagalog is a collection of dialects spoken in certain parts of the country and the rest of the world.
Article 1. All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood. Toggle navigation. Tagalog Mabuhay — Welcome. Language Difficulty. How difficult is it to learn Tagalog? Tagalog is considered to be a Category II language in terms of difficulty for speakers of English. Languages A-Z. Select Language. Tibetic Languages. Tok Pisin. Arabic Egyptian Spoken. Arabic Levantine. Arabic Modern Standard.
Arabic Moroccan Spoken. Arabic Overview. Bashkort Bashkir. Haitian Creole. Hawaiian Creole. Indonesian Bahasa Indonesia. Irish Gaelic. Malay Bahasa Melayu. Mandarin Chinese. Afro Asiatic Language Family. Algic Language Family. Altaic Language Family. Austro-Asiatic Language Family. Austronesian Language Family. Baltic Branch. Berber Branch. Caucasian Language Families. Celtic Branch. Chadic Branch. Chinese Branch.
There are over languages spoken in the Philippines. Filipino, the standardized form of Tagalog, is the national language and used in formal education throughout the country. Filipino and English are both official languages and English is commonly used by the government. Filipino Sign Language is the official sign language. The maps, documents, and datasets below provide information about languages spoken throughout the country.
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