![]() ![]() magkanu - magkano (borrowed from Tagalog).labung - labóng (borrowed from Malay rebung). ![]() bunsu - bunsô (borrowed from Malay bungsu).bage - bagay (borrowed from Malay bagai).Some Kapampangan words resemble those in Indonesian and Malay, except they are stressed differently.: Most Kapampangan-Tagalog cognates descend from Proto-Philippine, Proto-Malayo-Polynesian and Proto-Austronesian. Kapampangan and Tagalog share many cognates, especially in core vocabulary. Kapampangan is also one major source of early loanwords in Tagalog, being one of the two major languages spoken in the pre-Hispanic polity of Tondo, alongside Tagalog, which originated from an area possibly located in the Eastern Visayas and/or Northern Mindanao. Kapampangan sometimes looks like a divergent Central Luzon Tagalog dialect to the unfamiliar, but the two are distantly related, and Kapampangan is much closer to the Sambalic languages than to Tagalog, which is closer to the Bikol and Bisayan languages. Tagalog is spoken in Manila, as well as Bataan, Batangas, Bulacan, Laguna, Marinduque, Mindoro island, Nueva Ecija, Quezon, Rizal and Zambales, and serves as the basis of the national language Filipino, one of the Philippines' official languages alongside English. Kapampangan is spoken in Pampanga, southern Tarlac and parts of northern Bulacan. Kapampangan and Tagalog are two Austronesian languages of the Philippines. This appendix contains the relations between the languages Kapampangan and Tagalog. ![]()
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