Buhid language
The Buhid language (Buhid: ᝊᝓᝑᝒ) is a language spoken by Mangyans in the island of Mindoro, Philippines. It is divided into eastern and western dialects.
Buhid | |
---|---|
ᝊᝓᝑᝒ | |
Native to | Philippines |
Region | Mimaropa |
Native speakers | (8,000 cited 1991)[1] |
Austronesian
| |
Buhid | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | bku |
Glottolog | buhi1245 [2] |
It uses the Buhid script, which is encoded in the Unicode-Block Buhid (Buid) (1740–175F).
Distribution
Barbian (1977)[3] lists the following locations.
- Malfalon, Calintaan, Occidental Mindoro
- Barrio Rambida, Socorro, Oriental Mindoro
- Bato Eli, Barrio Monte Claro, San José Pandurucan (on the southern bank of the Bugsanga (Bisanga) River)
- Barrio Batangan, Panaytayan, Mansalay, Oriental Mindoro
gollark: Fear it.
gollark: I am inevitable, Kit-.
gollark: Pascal has integer types, I think, so a 1050Ti is probably good.
gollark: Hmm. I do fear tokenization actually.
gollark: I should do this with a pretrained big language model of some kind.
References
- Buhid at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Buhid". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- Barbian, Karl-Josef. 1977. English-Mangyan vocabulary. Cebu City: University of San Carlos.
- Barham, R. Marie. 1958. The phonemes of the Buhid (Mangyan) language of Eastern Mindoro, Philippines. Studies in Philippine linguistics 4-9. 4-9.
- Pennoyer, F. Douglas. 1980. "Buhid and Tawbuid: A new subgrouping Mindoro, Philippines." In Paz B. Naylor (ed.), Austronesian studies: Papers from the Second Eastern Conference on Austronesian languages, 265-271. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan: Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies.
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