I started learning Hangul. The concept is pretty easy but I don't think it's that popular? I'm not sure. Japanese or Korean? Chinese is just way to hard and (Vietnamese , Thai, Filipino) aren't what I want to learn. Should I go back to Korean or learn Japanese? Help please 
This girl I like is from the Philippines and speaks fluent Tagalog. Today we were passing notes and writing in different languages. In Tagalog she wrote: Landi si Tanner. Can someone please translate this? p.s. Tanner is my name so I guess just translate the landi si.
I heard the humor that the song "Kahit Isang Saglit" (which is a OPM, Original Pilipino Music) was originally written by Galileo Galilei... I think it's real title have a word 'heart'... Well I didn't memorised it ^^ If the humor is real... Can you give me the real lyrics of it?
This is something I've always wondered.
If I changed my last name and then learned another Asian language and culture, could I become one of them, marry one of their women, and start a family as one of them?
I don't mean the Philippines because I've never been there. I'm in America.
I don't understand Tagalog.
a friend of mine was talking to me, then before he logged off he said magandang ga bi what does that mean?
Can someone please translate to me this from Filipino ?
"kumusta naman ang flirt na yun?"
It was said in a teasing way (but joking) and i want to know what exactly does it mean in English.
Any help is appreciated. Thank you !
if all the population of Indonesia began speaking in Portuguese wherever they went, given that they remain Muslims and that their economy remains more developed than the Philippines?
What then would the English speaking Filipinos identify the factor for their state?
i.e. What is the determinism?
Popslove, the funny thing is you haven't even considered your own grammar. I couldn't even understand, let alone get a doctor to help me understand your crap. Not worth my time and money.
Hi I'am a filipino and interested to learn new languages? can you please give what's easier to learn asian or european? if asian what language vice versa? thanks for the help
Kapwa Ko Mahal Ko in German words
Okay...I'm 11 years old and I'm a pure pilipino... I write filipino essays correctly...and I can't just speak tagalog. My filipino grade in school is...quite low. I speak "ilonggo" [the language that filipino's who live in bacolod speak] I don't want to drop from the honor's list! PLEASE HELP ME! GIVE ME SOME TIPS!
When should I add "ng" at the end of a word? Any help would be appreciated! Thank you so much!
So I've studied Mandarin Chinese at a university in San Francisco and began to pick up some Cantonese on the way. However, I now am studying in the Philippines, particularly in Davao City where the Chinese people here speak a language called Fookien. I tried to speak to them in Mandarin but most of them can only understand a little, especially the students my age (18). They can't understand Mandarin well and there is no one here that speaks Cantonese either. I don't know anything about the fukien language they speak here or it's origin and culture form where it came from. Many of the fookien speakers here are also celebrate Chinese traditions differently as compared to the ones in America with the common Cantonese and Mandarin speakers. This whole culture shock is new to me despite the fact that I've been to the Philippines several times before and am fluent in 2 Philippine languages. It's just that I've never known about the Chinese community here though I knew it exsisted. I do speak to the people here in Visaya and Tagalog but when it comes to the Chinese people, I speak to them in slow Mandarin even though it's hard for them to understand sometimes. This whole discovery of fukien made me curious about its cultural identity since I am part Chinese and part Filipino. Can anyone tell me all about fookien/fukien? I've done some searching on it though all the answers that I found confused me.
i'm very interested to take up a course in mosaic making and i just couldn't find the site ( not sure of the right spelling ) the lady was interviewed in "shop talk" ( Phil.) hope somebody can help me.