Inagta Alabat
[também conhecido como Alabat Island Agta, Alabat Island Dumagat,]Classificação: Austronesian
·criticamente em risco
Classificação: Austronesian
·criticamente em risco
Alabat Island Agta, Alabat Island Dumagat |
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Austronesian, Malayo-Polynesian, Greater Central Philippine |
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ISO 639-3 |
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dul |
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Como csv |
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As informações estão incompletas “Notes from the Field: Inagta Alabat: A moribund Philippine language, with supporting audio” (1-57) . Jason Lobel and Amy Jugueta Alpay and Rosie Susutin Barreno and Emelinda Jugueta Barreno (2020)
"At present, there are 19 nuclear families on Alabat Island in which at least one parent is at least one-half Agta, yet fewer than ten individuals can speak the language fluently... At present, only four elderly Agta remain in the Lopez-Guinayangan area who can speak Inagta without considerable interference from Manide... it is now much easier to find Agta in the mountains of Lopez and Guinayangan who speak only Manide and Tagalog, than to find Agta who have an appreciable degree of fluency in their own ancestral language."
Tagalog
Minade
"Spoken on Alabat Island and around Villa Espina in the mountains of the Lopez-Guinayangan area in eastern Quezon Province on the large northern Philippine island of Luzon."
As informações estão incompletas “Australia and the Pacific” (424-557) . Stephen A Wurm (2007) Routledge
Tagalog
High level of bilingualism in Tagalog. Most speakers have shifted to Tagalog.
No literacy in it.
Spoken on Alabat Island, southeast of Manila, east of Quezon Province.