Kalanguya, also called Kallahan, is a dialect cluster spoken by the Kalanguya people of northern Luzon, Philippines.
Kalanguya | |
---|---|
Kallahan | |
Region | Luzon, Philippines |
Native speakers | ca. 100,000 (2010 census)[1] |
Austronesian
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Either:kak – Kalanguyaify – Keley-i |
Glottolog | kall1244 |
Area where Kalanguya is spoken according to Ethnologue |
Distribution
editKalanguya (also called Ikalahan, Kalangoya, Kalangoya-Ikalahan, Kallahan, Kayapa) is spoken in the following locations:[2][full citation needed]
- western Nueva Vizcaya Province
- Ifugao Province (Hungduan municipality)
- Benguet Province (Bokod municipality)
- northeastern Pangasinan Province (San Nicolas municipality)
- north Nueva Ecija Province (Carranglan municipality)
The dialects of Kalanguya are[3][full citation needed]
- Central Kalanguya (Kayapa)
- Northern Kalanguya (Ambaguio, Tinoc)
- Southern Kalanguya (Santa Fe)
- Western Kalanguya (Benguet)
Keley-i Kallahan (also called Antipolo Ifugao, Hanalulo, Keley-i, Keley-i Kalanguya, Keleyqiq Ifugao) is spoken in the Kiangan and Aritao municipalities of Ifugao Province. Its dialects are Bayninan and Ya-Tuka.[4][full citation needed]
References
edit- ^ "Request for Change to ISO 639-3 Language Code: Change Request Number 2015-061" (PDF), ISO 639-3 Registration Authority, 2015
- ^ Ethnologue
- ^ Ethnologue
- ^ Ethnologue
Further reading
edit- Hohulin, Richard M.; Hohulin, Elma Lou; Maddawat, Alberto K. (2018). Keley-i Dictionary and Grammar Sketch. Manila: Linguistic Society of the Philippines. ISBN 978-971-780-034-9.
- Santiago, Paul Julian (2016). A Grammar of Kalanguya (Doctoral thesis). Osaka University. hdl:11094/55717.
External links
edit