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#learnbaybayin — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #learnbaybayin, aggregated by home.social.

  1. New to Baybayin? Here's your quick start.

    Baybayin is a precolonial Filipino script used from the 14th to 19th century. It’s an abugida: a type of syllabary where each character represents a consonant + vowel sound.

    To write words, break them into syllables by sound.
    Example: “Cristina” → Kris. Tin. Na → ᜃ᜔ᜇᜒᜐ᜔ᜆᜒᜈ
    Baybayin has 3 vowel characters (A, E/I, O/U) and 14 consonants.
    Each consonant defaults to “A” unless marked.

    Use kudlit marks to change vowels:
    • Above = “E” or “I”
    • Below = “O” or “U”

    Use the virama to cancel the vowel — a modern addition for closed syllables like “Kris.”

    Baybayin reflects spoken Filipino, not English spelling.

    It’s a living script — found in art, passports, and even currency.

    Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baybayin

    #Baybayin #FilipinoHeritage #LearnBaybayin

  2. New to Baybayin? Here's your quick start.

    Baybayin is a precolonial Filipino script used from the 14th to 19th century. It’s an abugida: a type of syllabary where each character represents a consonant + vowel sound.

    To write words, break them into syllables by sound.
    Example: “Cristina” → Kris. Tin. Na → ᜃ᜔ᜇᜒᜐ᜔ᜆᜒᜈ
    Baybayin has 3 vowel characters (A, E/I, O/U) and 14 consonants.
    Each consonant defaults to “A” unless marked.

    Use kudlit marks to change vowels:
    • Above = “E” or “I”
    • Below = “O” or “U”

    Use the virama to cancel the vowel — a modern addition for closed syllables like “Kris.”

    Baybayin reflects spoken Filipino, not English spelling.

    It’s a living script — found in art, passports, and even currency.

    Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baybayin

    #Baybayin #FilipinoHeritage #LearnBaybayin

  3. New to Baybayin? Here's your quick start.

    Baybayin is a precolonial Filipino script used from the 14th to 19th century. It’s an abugida: a type of syllabary where each character represents a consonant + vowel sound.

    To write words, break them into syllables by sound.
    Example: “Cristina” → Kris. Tin. Na → ᜃ᜔ᜇᜒᜐ᜔ᜆᜒᜈ
    Baybayin has 3 vowel characters (A, E/I, O/U) and 14 consonants.
    Each consonant defaults to “A” unless marked.

    Use kudlit marks to change vowels:
    • Above = “E” or “I”
    • Below = “O” or “U”

    Use the virama to cancel the vowel — a modern addition for closed syllables like “Kris.”

    Baybayin reflects spoken Filipino, not English spelling.

    It’s a living script — found in art, passports, and even currency.

    Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baybayin

    #Baybayin #FilipinoHeritage #LearnBaybayin

  4. New to Baybayin? Here's your quick start.

    Baybayin is a precolonial Filipino script used from the 14th to 19th century. It’s an abugida: a type of syllabary where each character represents a consonant + vowel sound.

    To write words, break them into syllables by sound.
    Example: “Cristina” → Kris. Tin. Na → ᜃ᜔ᜇᜒᜐ᜔ᜆᜒᜈ
    Baybayin has 3 vowel characters (A, E/I, O/U) and 14 consonants.
    Each consonant defaults to “A” unless marked.

    Use kudlit marks to change vowels:
    • Above = “E” or “I”
    • Below = “O” or “U”

    Use the virama to cancel the vowel — a modern addition for closed syllables like “Kris.”

    Baybayin reflects spoken Filipino, not English spelling.

    It’s a living script — found in art, passports, and even currency.

    Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baybayin

    #Baybayin #FilipinoHeritage #LearnBaybayin

  5. New to Baybayin? Here's your quick start.

    Baybayin is a precolonial Filipino script used from the 14th to 19th century. It’s an abugida: a type of syllabary where each character represents a consonant + vowel sound.

    To write words, break them into syllables by sound.
    Example: “Cristina” → Kris. Tin. Na → ᜃ᜔ᜇᜒᜐ᜔ᜆᜒᜈ
    Baybayin has 3 vowel characters (A, E/I, O/U) and 14 consonants.
    Each consonant defaults to “A” unless marked.

    Use kudlit marks to change vowels:
    • Above = “E” or “I”
    • Below = “O” or “U”

    Use the virama to cancel the vowel — a modern addition for closed syllables like “Kris.”

    Baybayin reflects spoken Filipino, not English spelling.

    It’s a living script — found in art, passports, and even currency.

    Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baybayin

    #Baybayin #FilipinoHeritage #LearnBaybayin