fbpx
Wikipedia

Waray language

Waray (also known as Waray-Waray or Bisaya/Binisaya nga Winaray/Waray) is an Austronesian language and the fifth-most-spoken native regional language of the Philippines, native to Eastern Visayas. It is the native language of the Waray people and second language of the Abaknon people of Capul, Northern Samar, and some Cebuano-speaking peoples of western and southern parts of Leyte island. It is the third most spoken language among the Bisayan languages, only behind Cebuano and Hiligaynon.

Waray
Waray-Waray, Samar-Leyte Visayan
Winaray, Samareño, Lineyte-Samarnon, Binisayâ nga Winaray, Binisayâ nga Samar-Leyte
Native toPhilippines
RegionEastern Visayas, some parts of Masbate, southern part of Sorsogon, and Gibusong Island of Mindanao
EthnicityWaray
Native speakers
3.6 million (2015 census)[1]
DialectsStandard Waray (Tacloban dialect), Northern Samar dialect, Calbayog dialect, Culaba-Biliran dialect, Abuyog dialect and other 20 identified dialects and subdialects
Latin;
Historically Baybayin
Official status
Official language in
Regional language in the Philippines
Regulated byKomisyon sa Wikang Filipino
Historically regulated by the Sanghiran san Binisaya ha Samar ug Leyte
Language codes
ISO 639-2war
ISO 639-3war
Glottologwara1300
Areas where Waray-Waray is spoken
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Nomenclature

The term Waray comes from the word often heard by non-speakers meaning 'none' or 'nothing' in the language; similarly, Cebuanos are known in Leyte as mga Kana[what language is this?] and their language as Kana (after the oft-heard word kana, meaning 'that' in the Cebuano language).[not verified in body] The Cebuano pronunciation of Waray is walay with the same meaning, whereas the Waray pronunciation of Kana is kan-o meaning 'that, when' with both languages sharing many words or vocabulary in common.

During the Spanish period, texts refer to the language as simply being a dialect of "Visayan". In contrast, most contemporary linguists consider many of these "Visayan dialects" (e.g., Cebuano, Hiligaynon, Karay-a, etc.) to be distinct languages, and the term Visayan is usually taken to refer to what is called Cebuano in contemporary linguistic literature. Domingo Ezguerra's 1663 (reprinted 1747) Arte de la lengua bisaya de la provincia de Leyte refers to the "Visayan tongue of the province of Leyte", Figueroa's Arte del idioma Visaya de Samar y Leyte refers to the "Visaya language of Samar and Leyte". Antonio Sanchez's 1914 Diccionario español-bisaya (Spanish-Visayan Dictionary) refers to the speech of "Sámar and Leyte".

Dialects

Linguist Jason Lobel (2009) considers there are 25 dialects and subdialects of Waray-Waray.[2]

Many Waray dialects feature a sound change in which Proto-Bisayan *s becomes /h/ in a small number of common grammatical morphemes. This sound change occurs in all areas of Samar south of the municipalities of Santa Margarita, Matuginao, Las Navas, and Gamay (roughly corresponding to the provinces of Samar and Eastern Samar, but not Northern Samar), as well as in all of the Waray-speaking areas of Leyte, except the towns of Javier and Abuyog. However, this sound change is an areal feature rather than a strictly genetic one (Lobel 2009).[2]

Most Waray dialects in northeastern and Eastern Samar have the close central unrounded vowel /ɨ/ as a reflex of Proto-Austronesian *e.[2]

Usage

Waray is one of the many regional languages found in the Philippines and used in local government. It is widely used in media particularly in television and radio broadcasts, however, not in print media because most regional newspapers are published in English.

The language is used in education from kindergarten to primary level as part of the Philippine government's K–12 program since 2012 in which pupils from kindergarten to third grade are taught in their respective indigenous languages.

Waray is also used in the Mass in the Roman Catholic Church and in the worship services of different Christian sects in the region. Bibles in Waray are also available.[citation needed] In 2019, the New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures was released in Waray-Waray.[3] However, there is a growing population of Muslims in the region with the first mosque, Tacloban Mosque and Islamic Center, through a charity built by a Turkish Islamic religious authority in Tacloban at 2017 which teaches the scriptures and offers Friday sermons in both Waray and Cebuano in general.

Phonology

Vowels

Most Waray dialects have three vowel phonemes: /a/ [a], /i/ [ɛ~i] and /u/ [ɔ~u]. Some dialects have an additional vowel /ə/ [ə]; words with /ə/ in these dialects have /u/ in the majority dialects.[4][5]

Consonants

Waray has a total of 16 consonant phonemes: /p, t, k, b, d, ɡ, m, n, ŋ, s, h, l, ɾ~r, w, j, ʔ/. Two extra postalveolar sounds [tʃ, dʒ] are heard when /i/ occurs after /t, d/, further proceeding another vowel sound.[6][7]

Labial Alveolar Dorsal Glottal
Nasal m n ŋ
Stop p b t d k g ʔ
Fricative s h
Rhotic ɾ~r
Approximant w l j

Grammar

Writing system

Waray, like all Philippine languages today, is written using the Latin script. There is no officially-approved orthography for the language and different writers may use differing orthographic styles. In general, it has become common to write the language following the current orthographic conventions of Filipino.

Vocabulary

Waray uses many different words to specify a particular thing. These words might not be the same in spelling and in construction but they share the same meaning, making it a very diverse language.[citation needed]

Here are some examples of demonstratives and adverbs together with their equivalent definition in Waray-Waray:

English Waray
what ano, anyá, náno
where diin, ngain, háin
who hino/sino (hin-o/sin-o)
when sán-o, kakán-o, kasán-o
how páno, gin-áano, gin-áanya
here didi, dinhi, ngadi, nganhi, áanhi, áadi
there ngada, dida, ngadto, didto, aadto, aada
that iito, iton, ito, it
those adto, adton, aadto
these aadin, adin, inin
why kay, kay ano, kay ngano, ngano
this ini, inin, adin, adi

Verbs

English Waray English Waray
to run dalágan to fix something aydi/a
to walk lakát to explain ig-eksplikar
to climb saká, sak-a/i to invite ig-imbitar, kumbidahi
to swim langoy to attend atender, atendera/i
to talk/speak igyakán, igsumát, igsiring to send something ipadara, padad-a/i
to jump ambaka/i, lukso to create paghimo, pagbuhat
to sit lingkod to build pagtindog
to stand tindog to fly lupad
to shout/scream guliat to sleep katurog
to make friends makig-sangkay to write ig-surat
to cry tuok, haya to lay down higda
to buy palit, palita/i to love higugma-a
to travel biyahe to care asikasuha/i
to sing kanta to discuss pag-istorya, pagsabot, himangraw
to dance sayaw to drive pagmaneho, pagdrayb
to fetch water pag-alog to ride sakay, sakya/i
to drink inom, imna/i to carry pas-ana/i, dad-a, bitbita
to eat kaon to sell something ig-baligya, ig-tinda

Numbers

Native numbers are used for numbers one through ten. From eleven onwards, Spanish numbers are exclusively used in Waray today, their native counterparts being almost unheard of by the majority of native speakers (except for gatos for hundred and yukot for thousand). Some, especially the old ones, are spoken alongside the Spanish counterparts.

English Native Waray Derived from Spanish Spanish
one usá uno un/uno (m) una (f)
two duhá dos dos
three tuló tres tres
four upat kuwatro cuatro
five limá singko cinco
six unom sais/says seis
seven pitó syete siete
eight waló otso ocho
nine siyám nuebe/nuybe nueve
ten napúlô dies/dyis diez
eleven napúlô kag-usá onse once
twelve napúlô kagduhá dose doce
thirteen napúlô kagtuló trese trece
fourteen napúlô kag-upat katorse catorce
fifteen napúlô kaglimá kinse quince
sixteen napúlô kag-unom disisays/disisais dieciséis
seventeen napúlô kagpitó disisyete diecisiete
eighteen napúlô kagwaló disiotso dieciocho
nineteen napúlô kagsiyám disinuybe diecinueve
twenty karuhaàn baynte veinte
twenty one karuhaàn kag-usà baynte uno veintiuno
twenty two karuhaàn kagduhà baynte dos veintidós
thirty katluàn traynta treinta
forty kap-atàn kuwarenta cuarenta
fifty kalim-àn singkwenta cincuenta
sixty kaunmàn saysenta/sisenta sesenta
seventy kapituàn sitenta setenta
eighty kawaluàn otsenta/ochienta ochenta
ninety kasiyamàn nobenta noventa
one hundred usa ka gatòs syen cien
one thousand usa ka yukòt mil mil
one million usa ka ribo[8] milyon un millón

Loanwords and cognates

Waray has borrowed vocabulary extensively from other languages, especially from Spanish. These words are being adopted to fill lexical gaps of the recipient language. Spanish colonialization introduced new systems to the Philippine society.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ Waray at Ethnologue (19th ed., 2016)  
  2. ^ a b c Lobel, Jason (2009). "Samar-Leyte". Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World. Oxford: Elsevier. pp. 914–917.
  3. ^ "Iginrelis an Bag-o nga Kalibotan nga Hubad ha Lima nga Yinaknan". Jw.org.
  4. ^ "Waray: a Major Language in Philippines | English Language | Grammatical Number". Scribd. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
  5. ^ Zorc, David Paul (1977). The Bisayan Dialects of the Philippines: Subgrouping and Reconstruction. Canberra, Australia: Dept. of Linguistics, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. doi:10.15144/PL-C44. ISBN 0858831570. P. 47
  6. ^ Oyzon, Voltaire Q. (2014). An Winaray.
  7. ^ Rubino, (2001:797-800)
  8. ^ Makabenta, Eduardo (2004). Pagpurulungan nga Binisaya (Waray) ha Leyte ug Samar (Binisaya-English English-Binisaya Dictionary) (2nd edition). Quezon City: Adbox Book Distributors and Eduardo A. Makabenta Sr. Foundation. p. 121.

Further reading

  • Abuyen, Tomas A. (2005). Dictionary English Waray-Waray/Tagalog, National Book Store, 494 pp., ISBN 971-08-6529-3.
  • Diller, Timothy Clair (1971). Case grammar and its application to Waray, a Philippine language (PDF) (PhD dissertation). University of California at Los Angeles.
  • Rubino, Carl. Waray-Waray. In Garry, Jane and Carl Rubino (eds.), Facts About the World's Languages, An Encyclopedia of the World's Languages: Past and Present (2001), pp. 797-800.

External links

  • Arte de la Lengua Bisaya de la Provincia de Leyte – Google Books
  • Arte del idioma visaya de Samar y Leite – Google Books
  • Diccionario espanol-bisaya para las provincias de Sámar y Leyte – University of Michigan collection
  • Radyo Waraynon – Waraynon Internet Radio Station
  • Waray Museum Blog featuring Waray literature
  • Waray lessons
  • Bansa.org Waray Dictionary
  • Waray dictionary, literary database & teaching resource
  • Waray-Waray Dictionary by Andras Rajki – with Bicol, Cebuano, Hiligaynon &c. cognates and some Proto-Malayo-Polynesian etymologies
  • SEAlang Library Waray Resources
  • A large collection of bible study material in Waray language (free audio books, videos, publications) - Jehovah's Witnesses

waray, language, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, includes, list, references, related, reading, external, links, sources, remain, unclear, because, lacks, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations. For other uses see Waray language disambiguation This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Waray also known as Waray Waray or Bisaya Binisaya nga Winaray Waray is an Austronesian language and the fifth most spoken native regional language of the Philippines native to Eastern Visayas It is the native language of the Waray people and second language of the Abaknon people of Capul Northern Samar and some Cebuano speaking peoples of western and southern parts of Leyte island It is the third most spoken language among the Bisayan languages only behind Cebuano and Hiligaynon WarayWaray Waray Samar Leyte VisayanWinaray Samareno Lineyte Samarnon Binisaya nga Winaray Binisaya nga Samar LeyteNative toPhilippinesRegionEastern Visayas some parts of Masbate southern part of Sorsogon and Gibusong Island of MindanaoEthnicityWarayNative speakers3 6 million 2015 census 1 Language familyAustronesian Malayo PolynesianPhilippineCentral PhilippineBisayanCentral BisayanWarayDialectsStandard Waray Tacloban dialect Northern Samar dialect Calbayog dialect Culaba Biliran dialect Abuyog dialect and other 20 identified dialects and subdialectsWriting systemLatin Historically BaybayinOfficial statusOfficial language inRegional language in the PhilippinesRegulated byKomisyon sa Wikang FilipinoHistorically regulated by the Sanghiran san Binisaya ha Samar ug LeyteLanguage codesISO 639 2 span class plainlinks war span ISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code war class extiw title iso639 3 war war a Glottologwara1300Areas where Waray Waray is spokenThis article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA Contents 1 Nomenclature 2 Dialects 3 Usage 4 Phonology 4 1 Vowels 4 2 Consonants 5 Grammar 6 Writing system 7 Vocabulary 7 1 Verbs 7 2 Numbers 7 3 Loanwords and cognates 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksNomenclature EditThe term Waray comes from the word often heard by non speakers meaning none or nothing in the language similarly Cebuanos are known in Leyte as mga Kana what language is this and their language as Kana after the oft heard word kana meaning that in the Cebuano language not verified in body The Cebuano pronunciation of Waray is walay with the same meaning whereas the Waray pronunciation of Kana is kan o meaning that when with both languages sharing many words or vocabulary in common During the Spanish period texts refer to the language as simply being a dialect of Visayan In contrast most contemporary linguists consider many of these Visayan dialects e g Cebuano Hiligaynon Karay a etc to be distinct languages and the term Visayan is usually taken to refer to what is called Cebuano in contemporary linguistic literature Domingo Ezguerra s 1663 reprinted 1747 Arte de la lengua bisaya de la provincia de Leyte refers to the Visayan tongue of the province of Leyte Figueroa s Arte del idioma Visaya de Samar y Leyte refers to the Visaya language of Samar and Leyte Antonio Sanchez s 1914 Diccionario espanol bisaya Spanish Visayan Dictionary refers to the speech of Samar and Leyte Dialects EditLinguist Jason Lobel 2009 considers there are 25 dialects and subdialects of Waray Waray 2 Tacloban standard dialect the dialect used in television and radio broadcasts and in education Abuyog Leyte heavy Cebuano influence Culaba Biliran heavy Cebuano influence Catbalogan original dialect Pure Waray central part of Samar Island Calbayog mixture of the Tacloban dialect and the dialect of Northern Samar Allen Northern Samar mostly Waray Sorsoganon mixed with Northern Samarenyo Dialects in neighboring towns have also borrowed extensively from Waray Sorsoganon Many Waray dialects feature a sound change in which Proto Bisayan s becomes h in a small number of common grammatical morphemes This sound change occurs in all areas of Samar south of the municipalities of Santa Margarita Matuginao Las Navas and Gamay roughly corresponding to the provinces of Samar and Eastern Samar but not Northern Samar as well as in all of the Waray speaking areas of Leyte except the towns of Javier and Abuyog However this sound change is an areal feature rather than a strictly genetic one Lobel 2009 2 Most Waray dialects in northeastern and Eastern Samar have the close central unrounded vowel ɨ as a reflex of Proto Austronesian e 2 Usage EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2018 Waray is one of the many regional languages found in the Philippines and used in local government It is widely used in media particularly in television and radio broadcasts however not in print media because most regional newspapers are published in English The language is used in education from kindergarten to primary level as part of the Philippine government s K 12 program since 2012 in which pupils from kindergarten to third grade are taught in their respective indigenous languages Waray is also used in the Mass in the Roman Catholic Church and in the worship services of different Christian sects in the region Bibles in Waray are also available citation needed In 2019 the New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures was released in Waray Waray 3 However there is a growing population of Muslims in the region with the first mosque Tacloban Mosque and Islamic Center through a charity built by a Turkish Islamic religious authority in Tacloban at 2017 which teaches the scriptures and offers Friday sermons in both Waray and Cebuano in general Phonology EditVowels Edit Most Waray dialects have three vowel phonemes a a i ɛ i and u ɔ u Some dialects have an additional vowel e e words with e in these dialects have u in the majority dialects 4 5 Front Central BackClose Mid i e uOpen aConsonants Edit Waray has a total of 16 consonant phonemes p t k b d ɡ m n ŋ s h l ɾ r w j ʔ Two extra postalveolar sounds tʃ dʒ are heard when i occurs after t d further proceeding another vowel sound 6 7 Labial Alveolar Dorsal GlottalNasal m n ŋStop p b t d k g ʔFricative s hRhotic ɾ rApproximant w l jGrammar EditThis section is empty You can help by adding to it November 2018 Writing system EditWaray like all Philippine languages today is written using the Latin script There is no officially approved orthography for the language and different writers may use differing orthographic styles In general it has become common to write the language following the current orthographic conventions of Filipino Vocabulary EditWaray uses many different words to specify a particular thing These words might not be the same in spelling and in construction but they share the same meaning making it a very diverse language citation needed Here are some examples of demonstratives and adverbs together with their equivalent definition in Waray Waray English Waraywhat ano anya nanowhere diin ngain hainwho hino sino hin o sin o when san o kakan o kasan ohow pano gin aano gin aanyahere didi dinhi ngadi nganhi aanhi aadithere ngada dida ngadto didto aadto aadathat iito iton ito itthose adto adton aadtothese aadin adin ininwhy kay kay ano kay ngano nganothis ini inin adin adiVerbs Edit English Waray English Warayto run dalagan to fix something aydi ato walk lakat to explain ig eksplikarto climb saka sak a i to invite ig imbitar kumbidahito swim langoy to attend atender atendera ito talk speak igyakan igsumat igsiring to send something ipadara padad a ito jump ambaka i lukso to create paghimo pagbuhatto sit lingkod to build pagtindogto stand tindog to fly lupadto shout scream guliat to sleep katurogto make friends makig sangkay to write ig suratto cry tuok haya to lay down higdato buy palit palita i to love higugma ato travel biyahe to care asikasuha ito sing kanta to discuss pag istorya pagsabot himangrawto dance sayaw to drive pagmaneho pagdraybto fetch water pag alog to ride sakay sakya ito drink inom imna i to carry pas ana i dad a bitbitato eat kaon to sell something ig baligya ig tindaNumbers Edit Native numbers are used for numbers one through ten From eleven onwards Spanish numbers are exclusively used in Waray today their native counterparts being almost unheard of by the majority of native speakers except for gatos for hundred and yukot for thousand Some especially the old ones are spoken alongside the Spanish counterparts English Native Waray Derived from Spanish Spanishone usa uno un uno m una f two duha dos dosthree tulo tres tresfour upat kuwatro cuatrofive lima singko cincosix unom sais says seisseven pito syete sieteeight walo otso ochonine siyam nuebe nuybe nueveten napulo dies dyis diezeleven napulo kag usa onse oncetwelve napulo kagduha dose docethirteen napulo kagtulo trese trecefourteen napulo kag upat katorse catorcefifteen napulo kaglima kinse quincesixteen napulo kag unom disisays disisais dieciseisseventeen napulo kagpito disisyete diecisieteeighteen napulo kagwalo disiotso dieciochonineteen napulo kagsiyam disinuybe diecinuevetwenty karuhaan baynte veintetwenty one karuhaan kag usa baynte uno veintiunotwenty two karuhaan kagduha baynte dos veintidosthirty katluan traynta treintaforty kap atan kuwarenta cuarentafifty kalim an singkwenta cincuentasixty kaunman saysenta sisenta sesentaseventy kapituan sitenta setentaeighty kawaluan otsenta ochienta ochentaninety kasiyaman nobenta noventaone hundred usa ka gatos syen cienone thousand usa ka yukot mil milone million usa ka ribo 8 milyon un millonLoanwords and cognates Edit Waray has borrowed vocabulary extensively from other languages especially from Spanish These words are being adopted to fill lexical gaps of the recipient language Spanish colonialization introduced new systems to the Philippine society citation needed See also EditWaray people Waray literature Waray Wikipedia Languages of the Philippines Samar Leyte Waray Sorsogon languageReferences Edit Waray at Ethnologue 19th ed 2016 a b c Lobel Jason 2009 Samar Leyte Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World Oxford Elsevier pp 914 917 Iginrelis an Bag o nga Kalibotan nga Hubad ha Lima nga Yinaknan Jw org Waray a Major Language in Philippines English Language Grammatical Number Scribd Retrieved 2020 03 06 Zorc David Paul 1977 The Bisayan Dialects of the Philippines Subgrouping and Reconstruction Canberra Australia Dept of Linguistics Research School of Pacific Studies Australian National University doi 10 15144 PL C44 ISBN 0858831570 P 47 Oyzon Voltaire Q 2014 An Winaray Rubino 2001 797 800 Makabenta Eduardo 2004 Pagpurulungan nga Binisaya Waray ha Leyte ug Samar Binisaya English English Binisaya Dictionary 2nd edition Quezon City Adbox Book Distributors and Eduardo A Makabenta Sr Foundation p 121 Further reading EditAbuyen Tomas A 2005 Dictionary English Waray Waray Tagalog National Book Store 494 pp ISBN 971 08 6529 3 Diller Timothy Clair 1971 Case grammar and its application to Waray a Philippine language PDF PhD dissertation University of California at Los Angeles Rubino Carl Waray Waray In Garry Jane and Carl Rubino eds Facts About the World s Languages An Encyclopedia of the World s Languages Past and Present 2001 pp 797 800 External links Edit Waray edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia Wikivoyage has a phrasebook for Waray Waray Wikimedia Commons has media related to Waray language Arte de la Lengua Bisaya de la Provincia de Leyte Google Books Arte del idioma visaya de Samar y Leite Google Books Diccionario espanol bisaya para las provincias de Samar y Leyte University of Michigan collection Radyo Waraynon Waraynon Internet Radio Station Waray Museum Blog featuring Waray literature Waray lessons Bansa org Waray Dictionary Waray dictionary literary database amp teaching resource Waray Waray Dictionary by Andras Rajki with Bicol Cebuano Hiligaynon amp c cognates and some Proto Malayo Polynesian etymologies SEAlang Library Waray Resources A large collection of bible study material in Waray language free audio books videos publications Jehovah s Witnesses Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Waray language amp oldid 1126187940, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.