Why philippines but filipino




















Pinoy is the shortened, colloquial version for Filipino to mean the people, but never the language. It becomes Pinay when referring to a female, although Pinoy is also used to refer to both male and female. Part of the reason is that the traditional Abakada is limited and sometimes sounds funny or becomes the butt of jokes, as in the way certain words are spelled. This will need a different and meaningful rationale, which might be more nationalistic, but will definitely need an act of Congress and of the President of the Philippines.

KWF will accede to whatever proposal will win as a new name for our Filipinas. On the other hand, all government offices are involved in the problem of poverty and corruption but there are other departments specifically tasked with counteracting them. National Artist for Literature Virgilio S. Almario is a former chairperson of the Komisyon sa Wikang Filipino.

Virgilio S. First, history. There are now three forms of the name of our country:. If that is the case, should words borrowed from the Spanish with the letter F and already respelled with P revert to F?

The chief products are: rice, the principal food of the people; tobacco, smoked by the Filipinos and exported to foreign markets; sugar, the most valuable prewar export crop; coconuts, whose trees provide some of the loveliest scenery in the world and whose products furnish food, drink, and housing for the local population as well as important exports; Manila hemp, or abaca, which makes the best rope in the world; and numerous vegetables and fruits, such as the Philippine mango, which is one of the most delicious of fruits.

Moreover, there is an abundance of excellent standing timber, containing a wide variety of commercial woods. The good earth contains many valuable minerals—gold, silver, copper, chromite, manganese, coal, iron, and others. It is possible that further explorations will disclose still more. The waters around the islands abound in a wide variety of fish.

If the fishing industry were better organized, it could provide a sure and varied source of food for the local population and an important export. The Philippines is one country in the Far East which, as a whole, does not have a population problem.

The islands could easily support several times the present population of nearly 18,, people. But while there is much good agricultural land still untouched, certain areas are already crowded. Among these are parts of Luzon—the northwest coast, the Cagayan Valley in the north, and the central plains—Cebu, and the narrow coastal plains of some of the other islands. In small part, the reason for this poorly balanced agricultural development is the existence of large estates owned by either wealthy landlords, whose families have held the lands since pre-Spanish days, or by church orders, which amassed great wealth during Spanish rule.

Most of these are located near urban centers like Manila, or along fertile coasts or river valleys where the land and natural transportation facilities favored early agricultural development.

Moreover, many of them inherited the debts of those forefathers and are therefore almost slaves to the land. The lack of good roads, sanitary facilities, and other improvements has also prevented the development of many other good agricultural areas. However, the Philippines have never known famine. They had never known widespread hunger until the Japanese came.

But this little land of sunshine and plenty has had an unhappy history. Peace-loving peoples of the world face a tremendous job today in trying to ensure that that history shall not be repeated in the Philippines or anywhere else. GI Roundtable Series. Corey Prize Raymond J. Cunningham Prize John H. The reason probably has something to do with the origin of the term Filipino. Whereas the islands have had the Spanish name Islas Filipinas ever since the s, and this was obviously anglicized to Philippine Islands at an early date, the term Filipino was not used to describe the inhabitants until quite recently.

It was first used for themselves in the s by the urbanized rich of Spanish descent who were born in the islands "principales" and the "creoles", who had less status than those born in Spain "Peninsulares". The indigenous inhabitants were termed "Indios" by the colonial elite. Filipino nationalism grew originally amongst the "ilustrados", "principales" and "creoles". Only with some reluctance, and largely as a result of the activities of working-class nationalists such as Andres Bonifacio in the s, were the "Indios" included in the nationalist movement, and by the time of the insurrection of the term Filipino had come to be applied to all the inhabitants of the islands.



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