’ as there does not seem to be a word in Tagalog for them. Father San Buenaventura (1613, 255) commented ofBathala, “According to some he was considered to be the greatest of their anitos. ”Some of them had names descriptive of their functions”,which you may see in this...
hen/hen(henom)/hens(henoms) - variations are in parentheses, gender-neutral third person personal pronouns den/den/dens (dess) (means ‘it’) de/dem (dom)/deras tagalog Singular/Plural siya/sila (they) niya/nila (them/their) (sa) kanya/(sa) kanila (theirs/preposition them) turkish/t...
Furthermore, children speaking Cantonese, Mandarin, Punjabi, or Tagalog as their home language were divided into monolingual and bilingual groups according to their English proficiency, using administrative records of children's home language and English Language Learner (ELL) status. Analyses were ...