Bikol languages
| Bikol | |
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution:  | Bicol Region | 
| Linguistic classification: | |
| Subdivisions: | |
| ISO 639-2 / 5: | bik | 
| Glottolog: | biko1240[1] | 
| 
 
 Geographic extent of Bikol languages according to Ethnologue
   Bikol proper 
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The Bikol languages are a group of Central Philippine languages spoken mostly on the Bicol Peninsula of the island of Luzon and also parts of Catanduanes and Burias Islands and Masbate province. There is a dialect continuum between the Visayan languages and the Bikol languages; the two together are called the Bisakol languages.
Internal classification
Ethnologue
The languages of Bikol grouped according to Ethnologue are:
- Coastal Bikol (Northern)
 - Inland Bikol (Southern)
- Mount Iriga Agta language
 - Albay Bikol languages
 - Rinconada Bikol language
- Highland / Sinabukid dialect
- Agta variant
 - Iriga variant (standard)
 
 - Lowland / Sinaranəw dialect
- Baao variant
 - Bato variant
 - Bula-Pili variant
 - Nabua-Balatan variant
 
 
 - Highland / Sinabukid dialect
 
 - Northern Catanduanes Bikol (Pandan Bikol)
 
McFarland (1974)
Curtis McFarland gives the following classification for the Bikol languages.[2]
| Bikol | 
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Lobel (2000)
While McFarland (1974) splits Bikol into 11 dialects, Lobel (2000) splits Bikol into 12 different dialects (including Partido Bikol, which McFarland does not differentiate) and 4 main branches.[3]
-  Central Standard – Spoken primarily in Naga City. Also recognized (and sometimes understood) in Daet, Camarines Norte and many other areas of Camarines Sur; San Pascual, Masbate on Burias Island; Legazpi City and other cities along the eastern coast of Albay, southwestern coast of Catanduanes, and northeastern Sorsogon.
- Daet area variant
 - Naga City area variant
 - Eastern Standard Bikol – Spoken in and around Legazpi City, Catanduanes southern town of San Andress and Caramoran and North Sorsogon
 
 - Partido – Spoken in the Camarines Sur municipalities of Ocampo, Goa, Tigaon, Lagonoy, Sagñay, and San Jose. This dialect has a mellow intonation and is heavily influenced by Riŋkonāda.
 -  South Catanduanes – Spoken in the southern half of Catanduanes.
- Virac area variant
 - Bato area variant
 - San Miguel variant (transitional to North Catanduanes)
 
 
- Southern Coastal and Inland Bikol
 
- Riŋkonāda – Spoken primarily in Iriga City, Baao; Bula; Balatan; Baao; and Nabua, Camarines Sur. Also in Ocampo, Buhi and Pili in Camarines Sur and in parts of Polangui, Albay.
 - Buhinon – Spoken in Buhi, Camarines Sur. Contains features from both Bikol of Polangui and Bikol of Iriga.
 - Libon – Spoken in Libon, Albay.
 - West Miraya – Spoken in Ligao City, Polangui, Oas, and Pio Duran, Albay.
 -  East Miraya – Spoken in Guinobatan; Camalig; Daraga; Jovellar, Albay; Donsol and Pilar, Sorsogon.
- Central (Guinobatan)
 - Far East (Camalig, Daraga)
 - Southeast (Jovellar, Albay, Donsol, Pilar)
 
 
- Northern Catanduanes (Pandan) – Spoken by about 80,000 people in the Northern Catanduanes towns of Caramoran; Pandan; Bagamanoc; Panganiban, and Viga.
 - Bisakol
 
- Central Sorsogon – Spoken in Sorsogon City; Castilla; Casiguran; and Juban, Sorsogon.
 - Southern Sorsogon also known as Gubat language – Spoken in Gubat; Barcelona; Bulusan; Santa Magdalena; Matnog; Irosin; and Bulan, Sorsogon.
 -  Masbatenyo – Spoken in Masbate City; Mobo; Uson; Dimasalang; Palanas; Masbate; Aroroy on the island of Masbate, all of Ticao Island, and Claveria on the southern half of Burias Island.
- Standard Masbatenyo
 - Ticao Island variant
 
 
Some dialects of Southern Bikol have the close central unrounded vowel /ɨ/ as a reflex of Proto-Austronesian *e. However, Proto-Austronesian *e is realized as /o/ in Libon. Two Bikol dialects have unique additional consonants, namely Southern Catanduanes, which has an interdental lateral consonant /l̟/ (also transcribed as l̪͆ ),[4][5] and Buhi-non, which has the voiced velar fricative /ɣ/.[6]
References
Notes
- ↑ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Bikol". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
 - ↑ McFarland, Curtis D. The Dialects of the Bikol Area. Ph.D. dissertation. New Haven: Dept. of Linguistics, Yale University, 1974.
 - ↑ Lobel, Jason William, Tria, Wilmer Joseph S., and Carpio, Jose Maria Z. 2000. An satuyang tataramon / A Study of the Bikol Language. Naga City, Philippines: Lobel & Tria Partnership, Co.: Holy Rosary Minor Seminary.
 - ↑ http://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/handle/10125/1772/olson.html
 - ↑ https://vagabonddrifter.wordpress.com/2012/03/17/interdental-lateral/
 - ↑ Lobel, Jason. 2009. "Bikol". In Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World, 158-161. Oxford: Elsevier.
 
General references
- Lobel, Jason William; Tria, Wilmer Joseph S. and Carpio, Jose Maria Z. 2000. An satuyang tataramon / A Study of the Bikol Language. Naga City, Philippines: Lobel & Tria Partnership, Co.: Holy Rosary Minor Seminary.
 
External links
- Translate Bikol, an online English-Bikol and Bisakol languages translator.
 
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