Hiligaynon language

Hiligaynon
Ilonggo
Hiniligaynon, Inilonggo
Pronunciation/hɪlɪˈɡnən/
Native toPhilippines
RegionWestern Visayas, Soccsksargen, western Negros Oriental, southwestern portion of Masbate, coastal Palawan, some parts of southern Mindoro, some parts of Romblon and a few parts of Northern Mindanao
EthnicityHiligaynon
Native speakers
7.8 million (2010)
9.1 million speakers
Dialects
    • Standard Hiligaynon (Iloilo province dialect);
    • Urban Hiligaynon (Metro Iloilo dialect);
    • Guimarasnon Hiligaynon;
    • Bacolodnon Hiligaynon (Metro Bacolod dialect);
    • Negrense Hiligaynon (Negros Occidental dialect);
Latin (Hiligaynon alphabet)
Hiligaynon Braille
Historically Baybayin (c. 13th–19th centuries)
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Regulated byKomisyon sa Wikang Filipino
Language codes
ISO 639-2hil
ISO 639-3hil
Glottologhili1240
Areas where Hiligaynon is spoken in the Philippines
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Hiligaynon (also referred to as Ilonggo) is a spoken language in the Philippines with more than 9.1 million speakers. Hiligaynon is also part of the Visayan language family in the Central Philippines. Hiligaynon is most common in the Western Visayas (Region VI). The dialect of Mindanao Hiligaynon is common in Soccsksargen.[1]

It is the third most common native language in the Philippines. Cebuano is second, and it is usually spoken in Central, Eastern Visayas and Southern Philippines.[2]

Name

The name of Hiligaynon is comes from the Hiligaynon people from Iloilo province. They usually call it "Ilonggo" (Iloilo). The Hiligaynon people moved into Soccsksargen. The language was spread.

Reference