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  2. Cebuano language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cebuano_language

    Existing linguistic studies on Visayan languages, most notably that of R. David Paul Zorc, has described the language spoken in Cebu, Negros Occidental, Bohol (as Boholano dialect), Leyte, and most parts of Mindanao as "Cebuano". Zorc's studies on Visayan language serves as the bible of linguistics in the study of Visayan languages.

  3. Bisayan languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bisayan_languages

    Prior to colonization, the script and calligraphy of most of the Visayan peoples was the badlit, ... but also by Bisaya or Binisaya, meaning Bisayan language.

  4. Eskayan script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eskayan_script

    The script was developed approximately 1920–1937. "Although the script is used for representing Visayan (Cebuano)—a widely used language of the southern Philippines—its privileged role is in the written reproduction of a constructed utopian language, referred to as Eskayan or Bisayan Declarado...

  5. Eskayan language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eskayan_language

    It is highly plausible that Eskayan vocabulary was created by taking parallel Spanish-English-Visayan wordlists from textbooks, and replacing the Visayan layer with new vocabulary. Finally, the Eskayan script bears strong similarities to 19th-century Copperplate handwriting. [6]

  6. Eskaya people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eskaya_people

    According to Eskaya mythology, the language and script was created through divine inspiration by the ancestor Pinay who based it on the human body. Suppressed by the Spanish colonists, Pinay's language was said to have resurfaced under the leadership of Mariano Datahan (ca. 1875–January 17,1949), a veteran of Bohol's republican army.

  7. Classical Cebuano - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_Cebuano

    Classical Cebuano, or Spanish-Era Cebuano, (Cebuano: Karaang Sinugboanon, Karaang Binisayâ, Binisayâ sa Katuigan sa Katsilà; Badlit: pre-virama: ᜃᜇᜀ ᜅ ᜊᜒᜈᜒᜐᜌ, post-virama: ᜃᜇᜀᜈ᜴ ᜅ ᜊᜒᜈᜒᜐᜌ) was a form of the Cebuano language spoken during the Spanish colonial era of the Philippines.

  8. Cebuano grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cebuano_grammar

    Cebuano grammar encompasses the rules that define the Cebuano language, the most widely spoken of all the languages in the Visayan Group of languages, spoken in Cebu, Bohol, Siquijor, part of Leyte island, part of Samar island, Negros Oriental, especially in Dumaguete, and the majority of cities and provinces of Mindanao.

  9. Arts in the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arts_in_the_Philippines

    Artists and cultural experts have also revived extinct suyat scripts, including the Visayan badlit script, the iniskaya script of the Eskaya people, the baybayin script of the Tagalog people, the sambali script of the Sambal people, the basahan script of the Bicolano people, the sulat pangasinan script of the Pangasinense people, and the kur ...