- Jul 22, 2012
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- 32,685
Sounds like @SC kid ‘s type of night.I will never get when dudes back home just sit in a corner “tambay” and drink all day. Putting ice in the beer and sipping tanduay and getting the bbq and balut lmao
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Sounds like @SC kid ‘s type of night.I will never get when dudes back home just sit in a corner “tambay” and drink all day. Putting ice in the beer and sipping tanduay and getting the bbq and balut lmao
I hope to be anointed and known as the 'Cool Uncle' at family parties
I will never get when dudes back home just sit in a corner “tambay” and drink all day. Putting ice in the beer and sipping tanduay and getting the bbq and balut lmao
Making sinigang tonight. Do you guys like it sour?
Mannn if my filipino as$ didnt know any better, this would be The Debut, and im finna tear up!!A Classic to us Filipino-Americans
Anybody else not understand or speak tagalog? Or am I the only one
Anybody else not understand or speak tagalog? Or am I the only one
Really curious if there are any other illocanos out here?? Or is it just me
Yoooo sameMe bruh Mom and pops both ilocano
I cant speak it, only the bad words lol.. i can understand but not too deep
cant fault you if you were born outside the philippines
oh and bisaya>tagalog
Really curious if there are any other illocanos out here?? Or is it just me
This is kind of a toss-up as far ancestry and last names go. From what I've learned in school there, it's our version of a melting pot. I can't rule out the thought of last names as basis for taxes and govt purposes but considering how indigenous the system were in rural areas, it may probably be the case but not ENTIRELY dedicated to it.
For ancestry, the Spaniards, Chinese, Japanese, etc. had a lot to do with our Pinoy culture. From language, food, traditions to names. it's just a lot of influence from these colonizers, but primarily from the Spaniards. These foreign cultures may have hooked up with the Mayan settlers and those actions could have invoked a sense of melting pot.
Don't @ me or anything haha, but a plausible truth that my Filipino-Chinese friends and a bunch of grown ups have told me that it was actually the Chinese descendants that had to adhere to Spanish customs. To make last names long and sound "Spanish," Chinese migrants had to combine Chinese last names.
Ex: Cojuangco -> Ko-Wang-Ko
Rich and notable families like the Ayala family (they own most of Makati and BGC Fort) lived in Cebu when they started then moved to Manila. Cebu is where Magellan first landed ala-Columbus. He got washed by Lapu-Lapu though
One of you guys in this thread will eventually be anointed Tito Boy
anywhere to find san miguel in NJ?
Anybody else not understand or speak tagalog? Or am I the only one