As a Tagalog speaker I dont know the word "humagos" (and there is no root word "hagos") and its not found in dictionaries. "Humangos" (with root word "hangos" + "-um-") doesnt mean to paint, but it actually means to pant or to gasp as if out of breath. Hope that helps
in tagalog the "ng" in humangos is is not pronounced with the g...it is simply "ng" as in "sing" .. humangos means to pant - not paint.. maybe there was some clerical error there... so it will not sound the same as humongous i really like these videos..these helped me a ton with my english studies!
whats the difference between voiceless i and aspirated i; like if u pronounced voiceless i like that and u asked me what allophone of i that was id say aspirated i
I thought when followed by a voiceless obstruent. Didn't see the BETWEEN part. Damn it!! haha :) I love these puzzles. Where can I find more? So much fun (am I a geek?)
@@davidphilipsmusic You can find these in any linguistics Olympiad! Check out www.ioling.org for a database of hundreds of problems, both in the International Olympiad and other National Olympiads.
its simply unbelievable how you put 2 hour sessions into a few minutes and it makes so much more sense!!
Man, you're going to save my grades. It's been difficult to understand since I take virtual classes
As a Tagalog speaker I dont know the word "humagos" (and there is no root word "hagos") and its not found in dictionaries. "Humangos" (with root word "hangos" + "-um-") doesnt mean to paint, but it actually means to pant or to gasp as if out of breath.
Hope that helps
Really!!
i think he meant umagos
no it doesn't help since I'm not here learning tagalog, I'm learning phonological rules 🤷🏻♂️🤷🏻♂️ who cares
Thank you so much your explanation is clear enough 👍
Great lesson!
Thank you so much seriously. My quiz is tomorrow and none of my profs notes make sense
You a great 👨🏫, I am wondering do u have lesson for Acoustic Phonetics please
Thank you very much for this video! Could you please clarify, in Korean [p] and [ph] are allophones or separate phonemes? Thank you in advance
Hi please can you do another video on English grammar
Is that Tagalog word in any way related to the English word "humongous"? Or it's just a _mighty_ coincidence that they sound so similar?
in tagalog the "ng" in humangos is is not pronounced with the g...it is simply "ng" as in "sing" .. humangos means to pant - not paint.. maybe there was some clerical error there... so it will not sound the same as humongous
i really like these videos..these helped me a ton with my english studies!
to fetch is not "kaon" in tagalog.. however there is "kuhaon" in Waray - Waray, another filipino language, which definitely means "to fetch"
@@reynarosetrasmil3133 it means- kaunin or kunin, that is to fetch
Thank you so much
Thank you sooo much :)
whats the difference between voiceless i and aspirated i; like if u pronounced voiceless i like that and u asked me what allophone of i that was id say aspirated i
thank you so much ^^
I thought [i] becomes [i°] when ever followed by a voiceless alveolar :(
I thought when followed by a voiceless obstruent. Didn't see the BETWEEN part. Damn it!! haha :) I love these puzzles. Where can I find more? So much fun (am I a geek?)
Balkis Bengaga I thought the same thing 😞
@@davidphilipsmusic You can find these in any linguistics Olympiad! Check out www.ioling.org for a database of hundreds of problems, both in the International Olympiad and other National Olympiads.
الله ارحم من قراك فهاد لعواشر
سوميستر كاي شرحو ف 15 لدقيقة
Thank you a loooooot
I am from Morocco and I am happy to 👂 to your explanation
i just realised korean has a dental n too
Humangos.... get out of my head. please