The Tagalog Language
The Tagalog Language
Tagalog is the most important of the many tongues and dialects of the
Philippines on account of its being widely understood, and the most
developed by contact with foreign idioms. Spoken by over ten million of an
energetic race in the islands occupying the capital city of Manila, eight
provinces surrounding the metropolis, and a number of outlying islands and
districts beyond these limits, it is also generally understood by many far
beyond its own territory, especially in seaport towns throughout the
archipelago.
The language seems to be divided into a northern and a southern dialect, the
former being spoken in Bulacan, Bataan, Nueva Ecija, Rizal, and parts of
Tarlac, and the latter occupying La Laguna, Batangas, Cavite, Tayabas,
Marinduque, the coast of Mindoro and part of the Camarines Norte and
Camarines Sur. Dialect differences though can only be distinguished by local
mannerisms in pronunciation but very seldom in meaning.
Philologically, Tagalog belongs to the Malayan branch of the great Malayo-
Polynesian linguistic family, which extends from Hawaii to Madagascar and
from Formosa to Easter Island west of Chile, including New Zealand, Tonga,
and Samoa, as well as Borneo, Celebes, Java, Sumatra, the Malay Peninsula,
and the Philippines from east to west, a distance of 180º, or half the
circumference of the earth.
The Arabic words in Tagalog, which are hardly more than a dozen in
number, evidently came in with the Mohammedan religion, and upon the
extinction of that faith around the mouth of the Pasig, all but a few words
fell into disuse.
The construction of Tagalo does not seem to have been influences by any of
the foregoing languages but has retained its Malayan structure.
As has been already mentioned, there are some 17,000 roots in the Tagalog
language, many of which are nouns, pronouns, adverbs, and prepositions.
Verbs are generally formed by the use of certain particles (affixes) of which
there are more than twenty. Together with the noun and the adjectives
forming particles, of which there are several, the possible number of
intelligible Tagalog words can not be far from 50,000 to 60,000; quite
sufficient to express any non-technical ideas of any language whatsoever.
Yet, with all these there are some curious facts about the language and its
vocabulary. Many general terms can not be expressed in one word, but the
modifications of a general act have many words to express them, sometimes
far more than exist in English and Spanish. In addition to such
particularizing words, there are also many synonyms or words meaning the
same thing in Tagalog, many of which are local or provincial or not heard in
the same locality.
In Tagalog, there are twelve (12) names for the coconut, including its
different varieties and conditions for the maturity and preparation for use.
The verb to carry, with its variations has some eighty words to express all
combinations in Tagalog.