Filipino Bisaya Lessons 101: 59 Action Words (Verbs) with Illustrations

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 12. 09. 2024
  • Filipino Bisaya Lessons 101: 59 Action Words (Verbs) with Illustrations.
    A tutorial to help you learn and familiarise 59 action words in Bisaya. Enjoy learning some new words with fun illustrations. This video is perfect for beginners to use in simple sentences to increase their knowledge of the language.
    More videos you can enjoy:
    Bisaya 101: Describing Words / 20 Basic Adjectives • Filipino Bisaya Lesson...
    Bisaya 101: Romantic and Dating Phrases
    • Filipino Bisaya Lesson...
    Bisaya 101: Basic Bisaya Questions (Who, What, Where, When, Why and How)
    • Filipino Bisaya Lesson...
    Bisaya 101: Conversations in the Street
    • Filipino Bisaya Lesson...
    Bisaya 101: Parts of the House
    • Filipino Bisaya Lesson...
    Bisaya 101: Common Courtesies (Polite Words)
    • Filipino Bisaya Lesson...
    Bisaya 101: Asking for Directions
    • Filipino Bisaya Lesson...
    Don't forget to check out our Facebook and Instagram pages!
    FB: garyreancybisaya
    Instagram: @gary_reancy_bisaya

Komentáře • 20

  • @GaryReancyBisaya
    @GaryReancyBisaya  Před 4 lety

    😀This video is for people who are genuinely interested to learn bisaya in a very conversational manner. The words are very basic and are used in everyday conversation. If you believe that you are already an expert in the Bisaya language feel free to put your inputs on the comment section for other people to learn as well. As always guys, have a nice day!!! 😊😀😜🇵🇭

    • @GaryReancyBisaya
      @GaryReancyBisaya  Před 4 lety

      Thanks so much for helping us out, we really appreciate it, especially in the early days while we are still continuing to grow our channel and find our audience. 😁

  • @johncano3972
    @johncano3972 Před 2 lety +1

    THANKS FOR HELPING US LEARN IN A EASY WAY. I LOVE YOUR SYSTEM..👍🏼

  • @philam1973
    @philam1973 Před 8 měsíci

    Some of the difficulties I have with Visaya is that word meanings can change from city to city. The other is that , being a spoken language, rules aren’t always followed. Example Put mag- or Pag- in front of a noun to make a new verb. So “Pag-shoes” means “ put your shoes on”. Combo with English too.

  • @jasvirchandi7170
    @jasvirchandi7170 Před rokem

    👍👍👍

  • @Ledbellyjr
    @Ledbellyjr Před měsícem

    Your presentation is great! Really helps with learning. I love how we get both engish and pilipino pronunciations but I love the pilipino pronunciation the most coz it helps when learning how to correctly pronounce the words. I'm having to make sure i remember the soft "T" sound coz us English speakers want to pop the "T" hard 😅
    P.S. I know you guys aren't making videos anymore but I really hope one day you have time to make videos again. You're very good at it !! I have learned the most from you guys !! Thank you for your time and efforts !

    • @GaryReancyBisaya
      @GaryReancyBisaya  Před měsícem +1

      Thanks very much for the supportive comments we really appreciate it. Yer obviously listen to reancy as she is a native I just try my best to sound it out haha. As for making new videos I'd say its extremely unlikely due to having a toddler to look after now. I think we covered most of the basics which was what we set out to do initially but thanks again for your positive support and I hope you you can achieve what you want from learning the language

  • @philam1973
    @philam1973 Před rokem

    I’m an intermediate Bisaya speaker living in Cebu (1 hour from Cebu city by night). Which island are you all from? Some of my vocab doesn’t match yours but ok for the most part. I use “tarok” for build. I am constantly looking for a good online teacher. Formal class? I learned 3 other languages be speaking with everyone I met in other countries. Bisaya is not as easy because nobody can explain the rules. Even in formal language material. Example: Bisaya commands. When does “i” come at the beginning or ending of a verb. When do you NOT add a prefix or suffix, when do you add PAG prefix, when do you add “a” suffix? Or is it all memorized? English has rule with SOME exceptions but I haven’t found them. I just spent an hour getting a flat fixed today talking to the brother of the worker. I speak well enough to be understood (with little accent) but I know I make a LOT of mistakes.

    • @GaryReancyBisaya
      @GaryReancyBisaya  Před rokem

      Reancy is from Davao which might be why there are slight variances to what you use currently. I agree it is much harder to learn because bisaya is a spoken language so finding written material is more challenging.

  • @hiromultilingual
    @hiromultilingual Před 3 lety

    Maayo ang imong video. Ganahan ko'g kind of flash card style. I hope you guys will make videos which is for intermediate, coz some vlogers have already made for beginners, but no one haven't made advanced yet. I can't wait next one. Amping !

    • @GaryReancyBisaya
      @GaryReancyBisaya  Před 3 lety +1

      Hi :), thank you for the positive comments we appreciate it, when we created this channel we wanted it to be as easy as possible so people could learn from our first video. What topics are you wanting us to cover? :)

    • @hiromultilingual
      @hiromultilingual Před 3 lety

      @@GaryReancyBisaya I'd like to lots of example phrases with this kind of flash card style. Let's say " I'll go to SM mall at 6 PM" " I'll be there on Monday" " I just got up" etc...So I can watch your videos repeatedly.

    • @GaryReancyBisaya
      @GaryReancyBisaya  Před 3 lety +1

      @@hiromultilingual Thank you, we will try our best for you in future episodes :)

  • @philam1973
    @philam1973 Před 11 měsíci

    I don’t know about 20 of these. I know a number of alternates for others. I can carry on one way conversations with my vocabulary. My problem is so many Visayas ipuse lots of alternates and one unknown word can ruin the understanding. Or a phrase than has a unique translation ruins the thought process. I’ll add these ti my vocab. Note: where i live, a lot of people don’t pronounce the “l” in the middle. Example: “dula” is pronounced “dua” or “tulog” is “tug”. Very confusing sometimes.

  • @sam-ds9su
    @sam-ds9su Před 2 lety

    加油哈

  • @MariaFeGarcia-sq9hw
    @MariaFeGarcia-sq9hw Před 2 měsíci

    Push - tulak= tagalog tulak, Push in bisaya - itulod/itud.

  • @philam1973
    @philam1973 Před 11 měsíci

    My wife says that tulak (push) is tagalog. In Cebu duut is used.

    • @GaryReancyBisaya
      @GaryReancyBisaya  Před 10 měsíci

      My wife said tulak is used in davao but you can definitely use duut as well.

  • @aritst_abroad
    @aritst_abroad Před 2 lety

    im haveing. troublle with rolling the ‘r’ in bisaya words can you help with this maybe if i hear them enough ill get it right or example of best to make the sound of rolling the r

    • @GaryReancyBisaya
      @GaryReancyBisaya  Před 2 lety +2

      You can try listening to words like rambutan, relo, regalo to hear the sound. There are also lots of good videos on youtube to try and help with the rolling r sound in general. I hope that helps you.