oyayi oor Engels

oyayi

naamwoord

Vertalings in die woordeboek Tagalog - Engels

lullaby

naamwoord
en
a soothing song to lull children to sleep
en.wiktionary2016
cradle; hammock (in some areas)
lullaby

Geskatte vertalings

Vertoon algoritmies gegenereerde vertalings

Oyayi

Vertalings in die woordeboek Tagalog - Engels

lullaby

verb noun
en
soothing song, usually sung to young children before they go to sleep
wikidata

Geskatte vertalings

Vertoon algoritmies gegenereerde vertalings

voorbeelde

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Ang tatlong titik na patinig ay ginamit sa simula lamang ng mga salita o pantig. Tatlo lamang ang mga patinig dahil hindi binigyang pansin ng mga sinaunang Filipino ang kaibahan ng bigkas sa i at e, at sa u at o sa karamihan ng kanilang mga wika bago nila hiniram ang mga salitang Kastila. Hanggang ngayon, mapagpapalit ang mga patinig na ito sa mga salita tulad ng lalaki/lalake, babae/kababaihan, uod/ood, puno/punung-kahoy, at oyaye/oyayi/uyayi (duyan o panghehele).
The three vowel characters were only used at the beginning of words and syllables, or syllables without any consonant. There were only three vowels because the ancient Tagalogs, and many other linguistic groups, did not distinguish between the pronunciations of i and e, or u and o until Spanish words entered their languages. Even today these sounds are interchangeable in words such as lalaki/lalake (man), babae (woman) and kababaihan (womanhood or womankind), uód/oód (worm), punò (tree trunk) and punung-kahoy (tree), and oyaye/oyayi/uyayi (lullaby).ParaCrawl Corpus ParaCrawl Corpus
Tatlo lamang ang mga patinig dahil hindi binigyang pansin ang kaibahan ng bigkas sa I at E, at sa U at O sa maraming wika ng mga sinaunang Filipino bago nila hiniram ang mga salitang Kastila. Hanggang ngayon, mapagpapalit ang mga patinig na ito sa mga salita tulad ng lalaki/lalake, babae/kababaihan, uod/ood, puno/punung-kahoy, at oyaye/oyayi/uyayi (duyan o panghehele).
(mercy, to bring with, head, and possible) There are only three vowels in the baybayin because ancient Filipinos of many linguistic groups did not distinguish between the pronunciations of I and E, and U and O before Spanish words entered their languages. Even today these sounds are interchangeable in words such as lalaki/lalake (man), babae (woman) and kababaihan (women in general), uód/oód (worm), punò (tree trunk) and punung-kahoy (tree), and oyaye/oyayi/uyayi (lullaby).ParaCrawl Corpus ParaCrawl Corpus
2 sinne gevind in 1 ms. Hulle kom uit baie bronne en word nie nagegaan nie.