PH is so amazing. To have a Chinese identity as part of its history and culture. And to know that Filipinos are really diverse. You girls have great personalities, love it!!!
actually filo chinese is more closer with hokkien and fujian since filo chinese ancestors are from south china so it's actually not necessary for filo chinese to speak mandarin but speak the chinese languages like hokkien and fujianese these dialects/ languages are more important to be honest.
Changing one’s surname is sometimes a necessity, early chinese migrants to the Philippines encountered many difficulties, through their hardwork and of being resourceful were they able to overcome the many challenges coming thru out their lives
During Spanish colonial era when they converted to Christianity they still retain their names and surnames by Hispanizing it or using the name of their godfather.
it depends where were you grew up in the Philippines. in the big cities you have the Chinese schools where you can learn the Mandarin and other Chinese cultures. i went to Mapua Technical University in Manila, Philippines. We used the English language most of the times, hardly using any Tagalog there....
Okie I think I learned a lot haha. Im part chinese since my grandma is chinese but I looked at her documents and her last name does not sound chinese at all. So that's why
I'm Filipino American but gosh, that part about the Great Wall is pretty intense. Reminds me of my parents. But not that extreme. They both want me to be with a Filipino woman -_- or else...
(a) (Hokkian dialect ~ 'Philippine Fukien'): It is my sincerest hope and deepest wish for the Filipino-Chinese community in the Philippines,'.... 'to instill in the minds of the young generation of Filipino-Chinese,'.... 'the importance of speaking Hokkien in everyday conversations,'.... 'not just with their parents and elders in family settings,'.... 'but more importantly with their peers outside of the home,'.... '(As with all things in life,'.... 'the older generation will pass,'.... 'and it is the younger generation,'.... 'who will take over the previous generation,'.... 'and keep the ethnic Chinese language and culture alive in society,'.... 'and carry on the human task and responsibility of ensuring that the language doesn't become extinct,'.... 'The Hokkien language should not join the ranks of other ancient languages like Aramaic, Latin, etc which can now only be found and heard in historical books and select institutions,'.... '(With the power of the internet in the mass dissemination of information,'.... 'we never know who will read this posted comment,'.... 'and come to a realization how real the possibility of the Hokkien dialect becoming a dead language will come to pass in the coming decades,'.... 'as many researchers have voiced concern over and expressed,'.... 'Learned researchers can see the writing on the wall,'.... 'and are sounding the alarm,'.... 'and it would behoove the entire Filipino-Chinese community to pay attention and take heed,'.... "(It is now more than ever that people need to take action,'.... '(The responsibility of keeping the Hokkien dialect alive for centuries to come,'.... 'falls on the shoulders of every person who has any trace of Hokkian in their ancestry,'.... 'and every Hokkian and non-Hokkian person who cares about the Hokkian dialect,'.... '(Hokkien-speaking people alive today,'.... 'owe it to future generations to keep this Chinese dialect alive,'.... 'and allow future generations to come,'.... 'to continue hearing and speaking this lovely Chinese dialect,'....---- Jason Sy (19Nov2022, Sat, 6:15 pm) (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia): 💓🇸🇦🇸🇦
(a) (Filipino-Chinese ~ ): 'Hi guys,'.... 'I am 75% Chinese and 25% Filipino,'.... 'I was born and raised in the Philippines,'.... '(I went to Uno High School (which I understand is now Uno College) when I was 5 years old,'.... 'but my Chinese father pulled me out when I was 6 years old,'.... 'and sent me to a Filipino school,'.... "All my Filipino-Chinese cousins though went to Chinese schools (Philippine Cultural High School (Kiao Tiong), Northern Rizal Yorklin School, Grace Christian High School (Ling Hui), etc) and so they had that very good foundation of the Mandarin Chinese language,'.... 'because they learned Mandarin Chinese for about 10 years from Grade 1 to senior year in high school,'.... '({When my Filipino-Chinese cousins moved to Taiwan, it was easy for them to integrate and assimmilate into Taiwanese society because they had that strong foundation of Mandarin Chinese in their school years in Chinese schools in the Philippines,'.... 'And most of my Filipino-Chinese cousins have Hokkien as a first language along with Filipino because they speak Hokkien at home and really grew up in a Chinese community and school environment where they had to use Hokkien to speak with other Filipino-Chinese,'.... "(I lived at 4th Avenue, Grace Park, Caloocan City in my childhood years back in the 1980s where there was a large Filipino-Chinese community,'.... 'Many of my neighbors at Caloocan City were Filipino-Chinese and I frequently saw them in the neighborhood but I never got to learn and speak Hokkien because our Chinese father for some reason hardly spoke Hokkien to us,'.... '(Now as an adult in my late 40s, I told myself that I would make the effort to learn Hokkien as being 75% Chinese I feel that being Filipino-Chinese is a part of my identity,'.... '{Hokkien is easier for me to understand because I did hear my relatives speaking the language every time they came over to our house,'.... 'My challenge is mainly with pronunciation as my tone is all wrong and funny,'.... '{When I was 18 years old I did study Mandarin Chinese for one year at a Filipino university as part of the academic curriculum,'.... 'and it was easy enough for me to learn as I got an 'A' in both semesters,'.... '(Thank you for making this vlog and video and I hope that it inspires viewers to learn and appreciate the Chinese language,'....---- Jason Sy (12Nov2022, Sat, 9:30 pm) (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia): 💓💗🇸🇦🇸🇦
Yea, unfortunately but they're also right, it depends on the family. I'm a Chinese-Filipino living in the US and I have Cantonese friends who say that too that it's preferred that they marry within their kind just because of cultural familiarity and to communicate to the in-laws.
may mga unique catholic chinese filipino practices rin. sa ilocos, ginawa nilang santo si mazu tapos pinaparade siya na parang santo. ginagawa nila yan ng ilang henerasyon na
Which language do you prefer to speak? Would you say Chinese is a harder language to learn than Tagalog, cuz of the tones? Do you identify more on your Filipino or Chinese side? Do you find discrimination from either ethnicities. Do you find Filipino culture more social, open minded than Chinese culture? Similar differences? Maybe u can do a separate video? Thx! 🙂
sang ayon ako doon kay john Paolo ung slim pinay na pinay ang ganda pala ng combination ng chines at pinoy yun lang po magiging inspirasyon kita my chinay kong Lodi.
I'm Proud that I could speak and understand Chinese mandarin and a little Cantonese ... 我喜歡說普通話...我喜歡說普通話,因為我喜歡說話... Tagalog, Cebuano mixed Spanish, Thai with mixed Isan, Vietnamese... Multilingual ika nga.. :) pasalamat jud ko nga daghan ko nahibaw-an siguro sa ako ni pag ka talkative ba? pud pasa thai duay ...ฉันพูดไทยได้... toi co the noi tieng viet... habla espanol uno dos tres cuatro cinco ... mot hai ba bon nam ... nung xong sam si ha... usa duha tulo upat lima... one two three, four, five.... isa dalawa tatlo , apat , lima....yi er san si wu .. pero ang wastong bigkas ay i , er san su, u... peace :)
@kurt casas Lol I was about to say! Her Cebuano is terrible too, she mixes it with English. I actually know Cebuano, Filipino, Spanish, English, and Mandarin fluently. Her Chinese says "I like to speak Mandarin because I like to speak Mandarin." It makes NO sense along with her Spanish, which should be "hablo" not "habla".
Soooo it explains why I don't have a Chinese surname haha but still my surname (p.s I'm a girl and the name for this account is my Lolo who is Chinese ) ,I mean my family is related to the former governor of Cavite from the second-third republic of the Philippines
@@fredtacang3624 meron naman, but i guess we weren't really taught how to converse properly in mandarin puro memorization lang ng sentences and words for the test 😅 and another factor rin siguro is when most of us enter college na, we weren't surrounded with a mandarin speaking environment kaya di na naprpractice masyado ung mandarin (this is what me and my cousins think haha I don't know if this is how others feel or think as well)
Ang saya naman. Noon nagaaral ako sa patriotic sa tomas mapua dipa uso ang phone vlogs etc. Saya sgro mag ganito. Good luck to you guys more power to your channel.. 👍 fil-chi here also 😂
The great wall thing is depend talaga sa family. Mostly ng mga fil chi sa pinas still has the intact of chinese culture kahit matagal na sila. They value more chinese traditions than filipino kaya naiintindihan ko why they choose their fellow kasi hirap naman if di kayo magkakaintidihan. But yun nga case to case bases marami naman ng fil chi na nakakapag asawa na ng filipino but still retain their chinese traditions also I have a friend who is fil chi na they dont follow some chinese culture talagang they assimilated na in filipino culture. She cant speak any chinese kaya di niya tinuturing sarili niya as fil chi, only filipino with chinese blood. Parang koreans traditionally they want their children marry their own kind pero nagiging trend na rin na maraming foreigners na kinakasal sa koreans and they dont mind.
Yung Pamangkin kong Romanian Tatay nya Chinese Filipino pero kahit isa manlang walang sinunod sa kultura yung Pamangkin ko 3 years old palang may Boyfriend na hindi ma pigilan ng Daddy nya dahil marunong ng mag layas kahit Bata pa medyo walang namana sa Tatay lahat sa nanay pagiging rebelde pala sagot sa Magulang may inaway pa na Japanese Sabi nya small eyes people are Ugly daw akala mo naman walang lahing Asian hindi kasi halata na may Asian blood dominant kase yung Cacausian blood ng Bata Affected much ako kapatid ko Tatay nya pero pure Filipina ako magkaiba kami ng Ama ng Tatay nya Filipino Father ko yung Tatay naman nya Chinese
Iba ang language ng mga Chinoy. I live in mainland China and their language is different . I even asked the teacher of my son if they know "Fukien"....they don't know what the heck is Fukien lol
Fukien is spoken in the Fukien Province of China which is located in the Southeastern Part of China Mainland close to Taiwan. Taiwanese people do understand & speak Fukien. Most Chinese Filipinos came from this Province including my relatives who immigrated to the Philippines in the 1920's & 1930's.
my dad is from zamboanga but his father is from china. his mother was also borna and raised in zamboanga too but has chinese parents from china. my mom is from cebu, full filipino :)
(a) (Hokkien dialect ~ 'beautiful Chinese dialect' ~ 'Philippine Hokkien'): 'It's disheartening that Filipino-Chinese parents of my age (Generation X) are not concerned about their children talking in Hokkien or Fukien,'.... '(I am in my late 40s and was born in the Philippines in the mid-1970s,'.... 'I am a Xennial or Gen Xer,'.... 'and come from Generation X,'.... '(In the 1980s, I grew up at Grace Park in Caloocan City where there is a sizeable Filipino-Chinese community,'.... 'There are two Chinese schools in Caloocan City, namely Philippine Cultural High School and Northern Rizal Yorklin School,'.... 'My Filipino-Chinese cousins went to these two Chinese schools and Grace Christian High School and their parents (my uncles and aunts) spoke to them in Fukien at home and so my Generation X cousins grew up speaking Fukien,'.... 'and they had a good foundation of Mandarin Chinese as Mandarin Chinese is taught in Chinese schools for about 12 years from Kinder 1 to senior high school,'.... "(My upbringing was drastically different and even if my father was pure Chinese, he did not care about his children speaking Chinese like Fukien and learning Mandarin Chinese at school,'.... 'My siblings and I went to a Filipino school and our father did not care about speaking to us in Fukien at home nor learning Chinese in a Chinese school,'.... "(Fortunately for me, my mind is able to pick up languages quite well and so I remember phrases here and there in Fukien when I heard my Chinese relatives talking in Fukien,'.... '(Now as an adult, I tried watching videos on TH-cam where Hokkien speakers in other Asian countries (China, Singapore, etc) would try to speak Hokkien to each other,'.... 'I could pick up certain lines from Hokkien speakers in other Asian countries,'.... 'They want to make an effort to keep the Hokkien language from dying,'.... '(There are great academic research studies on Philippine Hokkien and sadly, studies have shown that the Hokkien language will die out in the coming decades,'.... '{Generation Y or Millennial and Generation Z Filipino-Chinese do not speak Hokkien,'.... 'and their Generation X Filipino-Chinese parents do not ENCOURAGE them to speak Hokkien even at home,'.... '(I am very fortunate that I grew up with an appreciation of Hokkien (and Mandarin Chinese) and was very blessed to hear my relatives speaking this beautiful Chinese dialect,'.... '{My hope for the Filipino-Chinese community in the Philippines is to take pride in the Hokkien dialect and to encourage the younger generation to speak Hokkien in order to protect the language and to keep the language from dying,'.... 'I have been living away from the Philippines since 2008 and have been living here in the Middle East for over 10 years now,'.... '(I picked up the Arabic language and made the effort to learn Arabic and so now I can read and write in Arabic and can engage in conversational Arabic,'.... '(I told myself that whenever I get the chance to be in the Philippines and meet Filipino-Chinese, I will make the effort to learn and speak Hokkien because I take pride in the Hokkien dialect as this is the language spoken by my elders and is part of the ethnic and cultural identity of Filipino-Chinese,'.... '{My current residence in the Philippines is Bulacan and I do not meet any Filipino-Chinese anywhere in Bulacan who speak Hokkien,'.... '{I hope that the Filipino-Chinese in the Philippines realize the importance of the Hokkien dialect,'.... 'and the importance of doing their part in PRESERVING the Hokkien dialect in the Philippines before the language dies from indifference ('or 'yung walang pakialam'),'....----- Jason Sy (18Nov2022, Friday, 1:30 am) (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia): 💓🇸🇦🇸🇦
In my opinion, nakakahiya lalo na pag ‘di ka marunong magchinese (中文)tapos alam ng ibang tao na half chinese ka kasi first of all, ‘yan ang ginagamit na basis ng ibang tao, I mean ‘yan ‘yong parang nagsisilbing proof na may lahi ka talagang chinese which is nangyari sa akin. *cries* Pero ngayon, I know naman na how to speak Mandarin (Not that pro tho). Fookien nalang fights na lol.
(a) (Hokkien dialect ~ 'beautiful Chinese dialect' ~ 'Philippine Hokkien'): 'As a community grows and expands, the language spoken by the community should grow as well,'.... '(Sadly from what I've read and viewed on-line,'.... 'the spread and growth of the Fukien language isn't growing in direct proportion to the Filipino-Chinese community's growth in population,'.... '(This is what research academic studies have discovered,'.... 'That Hokkien is a dying language in the Philippines,'.... "(I am a firm believer that reversing this trend is still possible,'.... 'if enough people in the community cared,'.... "{That there should be a campaign in the Philippines among Filipino-Chinese to make speaking Hokkien cool,'.... 'like what is being done right now in Singapore,'.... '(It is the whole community that should come together to PRESERVE the Hokkien language,'.... 'because one generation alone cannot carry out this task,'.... '(Like in Singapore, Generation Z youngsters post and upload videos on TH-cam on speaking Hokkien with their peers and other Gen Zers,'.... '{What can the older generation of Hokkien-speaking people do???'..... '{Well, one possible action Filipino-Chinese parents can do,'.... 'is to INSIST on using Fukien at home in order to keep the language robust and alive,'.... "(The only way to ENSURE a language's survival is CONTINUED USE,'.... 'and being PASSED ON from generation to generation,'.... '(Hokkien is a spoken language that is handed down from generation to generation,'.... '(How can the Millennials (Generation Y) and Gen Zers (Generation Z) of Filipino-Chinese,'.... 'pass on the spoken dialect of Hokkien to succeeding generations,'.... 'if presently they are not taking an ACTIVE INTEREST in speaking Hokkien,'.... 'and not speaking it amongst themselves,???'....---- Jason Sy (18Nov2022, Fri, 2:30 am) (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia) 💓🇸🇦🇸🇦
Yung mukha pang pinoy yung full chinese 🤣🤣🤣 anyways this part 4:23 i remember my friend told me their real surname is ong but they have to changed it a filipino surname i thought shes joking lol
there's no official ethnic census in the philippines, so realistically, nobody knows, but national geographic made a study around last 2005 saying that around 36% of the average filipino genepool is east asian
Like 27% of pinoys, i also have chinese blood, pero di na obvious/prominent lol At any rate, i dated two foreign chinese (mainland). Yung isa, open na foreigner/pinoy BF ng anak nila. Yung isa, di mashado pero courteous naman. In fact kahit chinoy, or foreign-based chinese (non-mainlander), hindi nila kino-consider as 'true' chinese. The usual banana label, yellow outside but white/westernized inside, no offense
In a Chinese family, the parents are the head of the business. Hence, they are the treasurer of the house. In a Filipino family, the kids provide for their parents the moment they start working. They also provide support to other relatives who may be in need.’ In short, she is concerned that the Filipino partner will get money from the business pot to provide for his/her family. Hope this enlightens you :)
@Alexander Dumas-Montechristo agree kasi kuya ko half Chinese kasi Daddy nya Chinese magkaiba kami ng Daddy maharot kasi Mommy ko haha🤣 lagi akong pinapagalitan ang tamad-tamad ko daw naalala ko nung 15 years old sya nag working student sya ako 10 years old hindi ko hinugasan yung Plato at hindi ako nag saing ayon pinagalitan nya ako nag tatrabaho na daw sya . Tapos sya parin daw mag luluto at mag huhugas ng Plato love na love ko kuya ko ang Bait nya Kuripot nga lang haha😆
Dahil mga 3rd or 4th generation na mga batang yan. Kahit mga magulang nyan, hirap na rin umintindi ng chinese. Kaya nga hindi bumabalik ng tsina. Dahil for every succeeding generation na nagsstay mas lalong nagiging assimilated sila at mas lalong hindi nakakarelate sa tsina.
eh syempre, buhay pinas, di naman kailangan magchinese. ung salita ng mga boomer at matatanda, hokkien ung salita tapos di rin un ung tinuturo sa eskuwela. sa eskuwela, turo ung mandarin na sino ba gumagamit? ung mga bagong dating or turistang taidioka mainlanders lang o hongkonger o taiwanese
Ako may dugong Intsik din ako dahil both of my Grandparents are Chinese. All of my Uncles and Aunties are big businessmen. And dey went to a Chinese school as well. But my heart is a Filipino. At hindi ko gusto ginagawa ng mga taga-Mainland Chinese sa bansa natin. No way! Filipinos are for Filipinos. Not for Chinese. Fil-Chi. will do. But not to be controlled by Chinese becoz dis country is for Filipinos only! Whether Muslim or Interracial, this land belongs to us Filipinos.
Mababa ang tingin ng mga chinese sa pinoy kaya ayaw nila makapag asawa ng pinoy ang anak nila specially the girls. Yun ang real reason behind that. Ididisown ang anak pag nag asawa ng pinoy. Maraming ganyan na tsinoy. Filipino citizen kayo, dapat hindi ganon ang mentality nyo. Dapat idisown din layo ng philippines at palayasin. May kilala ako chinese na ganon daw tlaga cla. Ung iba pa nga, ang tingin nila sa pinoy ay hindi tao. Ginagamit lang nila ang filipino zitizen pag kailangan nila pero pag sila sila lang chinese sila
In whole conversation u people talk in half English and rest of language in other ..may be Chinese or Philippine couldn't understand a single word😔 Back to Basic.......... 😉
Yenn Kathleen good idea,useful for people like me, now I thinking which topic u will get for us 😃 foe next video 😯but surely the topic must not be between Japanese V😠s Philippine or Korea V😠s Philippine 😂😂😂.Moreover thanks, this time no one came behind u😆😆😆😉.bye. take care till next video. ❤
kasi maraming pilipino na may halong chinese na dating dati pa na kinalimutan na ng pamilya nila kasi wala na pakialam pamilya na un sa origins ng pamilya nila
Hokkien is a dying language in the Philippines, most Chinoy cannot speak it anymore. most speak a "pidgin" dialect, a mixture of English, filipino and hokkien.
PH is so amazing. To have a Chinese identity as part of its history and culture. And to know that Filipinos are really diverse. You girls have great personalities, love it!!!
actually filo chinese is more closer with hokkien and fujian since filo chinese ancestors are from south china so it's actually not necessary for filo chinese to speak mandarin but speak the chinese languages like hokkien and fujianese these dialects/ languages are more important to be honest.
Philippines society is really halo Halo. Indo- Malay, Chinese, Spanish, American and a sprinkle of Indian. Culture grows with changes
Changing one’s surname is sometimes a necessity, early chinese migrants to the Philippines encountered many difficulties, through their hardwork and of being resourceful were they able to overcome the many challenges coming thru out their lives
During Spanish colonial era when they converted to Christianity they still retain their names and surnames by Hispanizing it or using the name of their godfather.
it depends where were you grew up in the Philippines. in the big cities you have the Chinese schools where you can learn the Mandarin and other Chinese cultures. i went to Mapua Technical University in Manila, Philippines. We used the English language most of the times, hardly using any Tagalog there....
Thank you so much for this video!!! I am the same but never recieved much background on it :( so this will be very helpful for me!!!
I AM ALSO HALF CHINESE AND FILIPINO
My Firstname is Noli and my Last name is Go
NOLI GO
😂😂😂😂😂
Kala ko middle name mo Me.tapos last name mo Tangere..
🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
Bantot kaya middle name rin niya
Wala ka na NALIGO😂😂😂.. NO LIGO... MALIGO KA NA
Well-adjusted Chinoys, happy and contented.
we had a Chinese blood our real legal or surname is Sy but in papers we used Lubid ...
In Tagalog sy is lubid hahaha
Prang mas mukang chinese c ate na chubby”(the girl that has a filipino blood)..😅👌🏻👍🏻 God Bless u both”..
ndi kasi nka gluta ung nasa kanan pero may mga pure n morena cla ung mga ndi nag gluta natural skin
@@babychi2496 hindi. Ang ibig sabihin niya yung mata kasi mas singkit yung chubby girl kaysa sa may lahing Chinese na kasama nya.
Hindi kase lahat ng chinese (mainland) ay maputi or light-skinned. Marami ren moreno/fair-skinned sa kanila
Okie I think I learned a lot haha. Im part chinese since my grandma is chinese but I looked at her documents and her last name does not sound chinese at all. So that's why
Hindi ako chinese pero pagdating sa pagkakaroon ng relationship parehas tayo, ganyan din sinasabi ng magulang ko sa akin.
I'm Filipino American but gosh, that part about the Great Wall is pretty intense. Reminds me of my parents. But not that extreme. They both want me to be with a Filipino woman -_- or else...
I know the feeling hahaha
(27Aug2020, Thurs, 10:20 am) (AlKhobar, Saudi Arabia): 'VERY DELIGHTFUL Filipino-Chinese cousins speaking Chinese,'......----- Jason Sy 👍👍👍💟💜💕
(a) (Hokkian dialect ~ 'Philippine Fukien'): It is my sincerest hope and deepest wish for the Filipino-Chinese community in the Philippines,'.... 'to instill in the minds of the young generation of Filipino-Chinese,'.... 'the importance of speaking Hokkien in everyday conversations,'.... 'not just with their parents and elders in family settings,'.... 'but more importantly with their peers outside of the home,'.... '(As with all things in life,'.... 'the older generation will pass,'.... 'and it is the younger generation,'.... 'who will take over the previous generation,'.... 'and keep the ethnic Chinese language and culture alive in society,'.... 'and carry on the human task and responsibility of ensuring that the language doesn't become extinct,'.... 'The Hokkien language should not join the ranks of other ancient languages like Aramaic, Latin, etc which can now only be found and heard in historical books and select institutions,'.... '(With the power of the internet in the mass dissemination of information,'.... 'we never know who will read this posted comment,'.... 'and come to a realization how real the possibility of the Hokkien dialect becoming a dead language will come to pass in the coming decades,'.... 'as many researchers have voiced concern over and expressed,'.... 'Learned researchers can see the writing on the wall,'.... 'and are sounding the alarm,'.... 'and it would behoove the entire Filipino-Chinese community to pay attention and take heed,'.... "(It is now more than ever that people need to take action,'.... '(The responsibility of keeping the Hokkien dialect alive for centuries to come,'.... 'falls on the shoulders of every person who has any trace of Hokkian in their ancestry,'.... 'and every Hokkian and non-Hokkian person who cares about the Hokkian dialect,'.... '(Hokkien-speaking people alive today,'.... 'owe it to future generations to keep this Chinese dialect alive,'.... 'and allow future generations to come,'.... 'to continue hearing and speaking this lovely Chinese dialect,'....---- Jason Sy (19Nov2022, Sat, 6:15 pm) (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia): 💓🇸🇦🇸🇦
Really informative. Now I know why Chinoys have Filipino sounding last names.
Have you been to China or Mainland?
nope
I am half Filipino half white American, and have Chinese Filipino relatives which are Chua’s
ganda nmn ng cousin mo.. sarap mahalin...
Makarelate ako a lot at ngayon gusto ko maging fluent sa fookien and yes we also do the “great wall”.
(a) (Filipino-Chinese ~ ): 'Hi guys,'.... 'I am 75% Chinese and 25% Filipino,'.... 'I was born and raised in the Philippines,'.... '(I went to Uno High School (which I understand is now Uno College) when I was 5 years old,'.... 'but my Chinese father pulled me out when I was 6 years old,'.... 'and sent me to a Filipino school,'.... "All my Filipino-Chinese cousins though went to Chinese schools (Philippine Cultural High School (Kiao Tiong), Northern Rizal Yorklin School, Grace Christian High School (Ling Hui), etc) and so they had that very good foundation of the Mandarin Chinese language,'.... 'because they learned Mandarin Chinese for about 10 years from Grade 1 to senior year in high school,'.... '({When my Filipino-Chinese cousins moved to Taiwan, it was easy for them to integrate and assimmilate into Taiwanese society because they had that strong foundation of Mandarin Chinese in their school years in Chinese schools in the Philippines,'.... 'And most of my Filipino-Chinese cousins have Hokkien as a first language along with Filipino because they speak Hokkien at home and really grew up in a Chinese community and school environment where they had to use Hokkien to speak with other Filipino-Chinese,'.... "(I lived at 4th Avenue, Grace Park, Caloocan City in my childhood years back in the 1980s where there was a large Filipino-Chinese community,'.... 'Many of my neighbors at Caloocan City were Filipino-Chinese and I frequently saw them in the neighborhood but I never got to learn and speak Hokkien because our Chinese father for some reason hardly spoke Hokkien to us,'.... '(Now as an adult in my late 40s, I told myself that I would make the effort to learn Hokkien as being 75% Chinese I feel that being Filipino-Chinese is a part of my identity,'.... '{Hokkien is easier for me to understand because I did hear my relatives speaking the language every time they came over to our house,'.... 'My challenge is mainly with pronunciation as my tone is all wrong and funny,'.... '{When I was 18 years old I did study Mandarin Chinese for one year at a Filipino university as part of the academic curriculum,'.... 'and it was easy enough for me to learn as I got an 'A' in both semesters,'.... '(Thank you for making this vlog and video and I hope that it inspires viewers to learn and appreciate the Chinese language,'....---- Jason Sy (12Nov2022, Sat, 9:30 pm) (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia): 💓💗🇸🇦🇸🇦
The Great Wall is still a thing?? 😮😮😮😮😮😮
Yea, unfortunately but they're also right, it depends on the family. I'm a Chinese-Filipino living in the US and I have Cantonese friends who say that too that it's preferred that they marry within their kind just because of cultural familiarity and to communicate to the in-laws.
Hi,,ni Hao, iam Hokkienese from Medan,,, north Sumatra Indonesia
i strongly agree with this and i’m not fluent in chinese which sucks
im also not fluent hahaahaha
Yenn Kathleen at least im not alone
Qui lai Filipino Chinese, Gong xi ni everyone, Binondo Manila. S.M.Es.........
yess filipino-chinese 🇵🇭🇨🇳
What should I do to win against the great wall?
Filipino Japanese here (^_-)-☆
Mas mgnda lahi ng pinoy japanese kesa chinoy
Ako rin.
✨ the more you know ✨
Share kayo about sa religious traditions nyo, kung Buddhist ba kayo or Tao
We're catholic 😅
may mga unique catholic chinese filipino practices rin. sa ilocos, ginawa nilang santo si mazu tapos pinaparade siya na parang santo. ginagawa nila yan ng ilang henerasyon na
Which language do you prefer to speak? Would you say Chinese is a harder language to learn than Tagalog, cuz of the tones? Do you identify more on your Filipino or Chinese side? Do you find discrimination from either ethnicities. Do you find Filipino culture more social, open minded than Chinese culture? Similar differences? Maybe u can do a separate video? Thx! 🙂
kaya pla hiniwalayan ako nung x ko n chinay
yes that true! Yung Chinese surename namin De, at dahil kailangan daw palitan kaya naging Dellomas.
Me too im Chinay
sang ayon ako doon kay john Paolo ung slim pinay na pinay ang ganda pala ng combination ng chines at pinoy yun lang po magiging inspirasyon kita my chinay kong Lodi.
well some tribes in the cordilleras definitely similar to chinese looks.
I think they are from Taiwan
Chinese Filipino dapat instead of Filipino Chinese, kaya nga Chinoy as in Chinese Pinoy.
More chinoy vidss!
I'm Proud that I could speak and understand Chinese mandarin and a little Cantonese ... 我喜歡說普通話...我喜歡說普通話,因為我喜歡說話... Tagalog, Cebuano mixed Spanish, Thai with mixed Isan, Vietnamese... Multilingual ika nga.. :) pasalamat jud ko nga daghan ko nahibaw-an siguro sa ako ni pag ka talkative ba? pud pasa thai duay ...ฉันพูดไทยได้... toi co the noi tieng viet... habla espanol uno dos tres cuatro cinco ... mot hai ba bon nam ... nung xong sam si ha... usa duha tulo upat lima... one two three, four, five.... isa dalawa tatlo , apat , lima....yi er san si wu .. pero ang wastong bigkas ay i , er san su, u... peace :)
Belle Libarios counting in different languages doesnt make u multilingual
@kurt casas Lol I was about to say! Her Cebuano is terrible too, she mixes it with English. I actually know Cebuano, Filipino, Spanish, English, and Mandarin fluently. Her Chinese says "I like to speak Mandarin because I like to speak Mandarin." It makes NO sense along with her Spanish, which should be "hablo" not "habla".
That’s copy and paste sis
dude, as a filipino tornatras, you're messing up spanish and chinese on a wide-scale 😂
Soooo it explains why I don't have a Chinese surname haha but still my surname (p.s I'm a girl and the name for this account is my Lolo who is Chinese ) ,I mean my family is related to the former governor of Cavite from the second-third republic of the Philippines
Nakakaintindi po ba kayo ng chinese language or/and characters?
yup! pero hindi ung super to the highest levels hahaha ung enough to survive lang hahaha
Thanks sa pag share wala ako masyadong kakilalang Chinoys
Curious question, if nagtuturo ng chinese language sa chinese schools, since elementary, bakit marami sa chinoy hindi marunong or hirap mag-mandarin?
because chinese schools usually just let students memorize the answers to the test, they don't really teach grammar, sentence structure, vocabs :(
@@YennKathleen
But thats about 12 years of exposure to mandarin righr? GS to HS. Walang naretain? With due respect
@@fredtacang3624 meron naman, but i guess we weren't really taught how to converse properly in mandarin puro memorization lang ng sentences and words for the test
😅 and another factor rin siguro is when most of us enter college na, we weren't surrounded with a mandarin speaking environment kaya di na naprpractice masyado ung mandarin (this is what me and my cousins think haha I don't know if this is how others feel or think as well)
Sa Chinese culture mas important na financially stable u before u get married...
✨ itttt waasss boouuuught by angkong ✨
Subcribe ako sa inyo.. ask ko lang kung ano ang tawag sa chinese dialect niyo?
hokkien 😊
More Chinese video ate huhu ilove it
maybe in the future hehe
Hen hao. Hen hao. We wanna promote more and more Chinese foods and culture in the Philippines! 😊
Huhu nalulungkot talaga ako kasi yung crush ko pure Chinese pero Chinoy sya tas ako walang kahit isang patak ng pagka Chinese
@Zerkion 101 sya
Bakit po
Ang saya naman. Noon nagaaral ako sa patriotic sa tomas mapua dipa uso ang phone vlogs etc. Saya sgro mag ganito. Good luck to you guys more power to your channel.. 👍 fil-chi here also 😂
thank you! :D
The great wall thing is depend talaga sa family. Mostly ng mga fil chi sa pinas still has the intact of chinese culture kahit matagal na sila. They value more chinese traditions than filipino kaya naiintindihan ko why they choose their fellow kasi hirap naman if di kayo magkakaintidihan. But yun nga case to case bases marami naman ng fil chi na nakakapag asawa na ng filipino but still retain their chinese traditions also I have a friend who is fil chi na they dont follow some chinese culture talagang they assimilated na in filipino culture. She cant speak any chinese kaya di niya tinuturing sarili niya as fil chi, only filipino with chinese blood.
Parang koreans traditionally they want their children marry their own kind pero nagiging trend na rin na maraming foreigners na kinakasal sa koreans and they dont mind.
Yung Pamangkin kong Romanian Tatay nya Chinese Filipino pero kahit isa manlang walang sinunod sa kultura yung Pamangkin ko 3 years old palang may Boyfriend na hindi ma pigilan ng Daddy nya dahil marunong ng mag layas kahit Bata pa medyo walang namana sa Tatay lahat sa nanay pagiging rebelde pala sagot sa Magulang may inaway pa na Japanese Sabi nya small eyes people are Ugly daw akala mo naman walang lahing Asian hindi kasi halata na may Asian blood dominant kase yung Cacausian blood ng Bata
Affected much ako kapatid ko Tatay nya pero pure Filipina ako magkaiba kami ng Ama ng Tatay nya Filipino Father ko yung Tatay naman nya Chinese
Iba ang language ng mga Chinoy. I live in mainland China and their language is different . I even asked the teacher of my son if they know "Fukien"....they don't know what the heck is Fukien lol
hahaha i think only a small percent of chinese people speak fukien in mainland china haha sa province area hahah
Fukien is spoken in the Fukien Province of China which is located in the Southeastern Part of China Mainland close to Taiwan. Taiwanese people do understand & speak Fukien. Most Chinese Filipinos came from this Province including my relatives who immigrated to the Philippines in the 1920's & 1930's.
Country speak Hokkien,,, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapura, Philippines
may I ask where your parents are from, just curious, I'm chinoy too but I'm more older than you.
my dad is from zamboanga but his father is from china. his mother was also borna and raised in zamboanga too but has chinese parents from china. my mom is from cebu, full filipino :)
@Zerkion 101 my dad is chinese :)
(a) (Hokkien dialect ~ 'beautiful Chinese dialect' ~ 'Philippine Hokkien'): 'It's disheartening that Filipino-Chinese parents of my age (Generation X) are not concerned about their children talking in Hokkien or Fukien,'.... '(I am in my late 40s and was born in the Philippines in the mid-1970s,'.... 'I am a Xennial or Gen Xer,'.... 'and come from Generation X,'.... '(In the 1980s, I grew up at Grace Park in Caloocan City where there is a sizeable Filipino-Chinese community,'.... 'There are two Chinese schools in Caloocan City, namely Philippine Cultural High School and Northern Rizal Yorklin School,'.... 'My Filipino-Chinese cousins went to these two Chinese schools and Grace Christian High School and their parents (my uncles and aunts) spoke to them in Fukien at home and so my Generation X cousins grew up speaking Fukien,'.... 'and they had a good foundation of Mandarin Chinese as Mandarin Chinese is taught in Chinese schools for about 12 years from Kinder 1 to senior high school,'.... "(My upbringing was drastically different and even if my father was pure Chinese, he did not care about his children speaking Chinese like Fukien and learning Mandarin Chinese at school,'.... 'My siblings and I went to a Filipino school and our father did not care about speaking to us in Fukien at home nor learning Chinese in a Chinese school,'.... "(Fortunately for me, my mind is able to pick up languages quite well and so I remember phrases here and there in Fukien when I heard my Chinese relatives talking in Fukien,'.... '(Now as an adult, I tried watching videos on TH-cam where Hokkien speakers in other Asian countries (China, Singapore, etc) would try to speak Hokkien to each other,'.... 'I could pick up certain lines from Hokkien speakers in other Asian countries,'.... 'They want to make an effort to keep the Hokkien language from dying,'.... '(There are great academic research studies on Philippine Hokkien and sadly, studies have shown that the Hokkien language will die out in the coming decades,'.... '{Generation Y or Millennial and Generation Z Filipino-Chinese do not speak Hokkien,'.... 'and their Generation X Filipino-Chinese parents do not ENCOURAGE them to speak Hokkien even at home,'.... '(I am very fortunate that I grew up with an appreciation of Hokkien (and Mandarin Chinese) and was very blessed to hear my relatives speaking this beautiful Chinese dialect,'.... '{My hope for the Filipino-Chinese community in the Philippines is to take pride in the Hokkien dialect and to encourage the younger generation to speak Hokkien in order to protect the language and to keep the language from dying,'.... 'I have been living away from the Philippines since 2008 and have been living here in the Middle East for over 10 years now,'.... '(I picked up the Arabic language and made the effort to learn Arabic and so now I can read and write in Arabic and can engage in conversational Arabic,'.... '(I told myself that whenever I get the chance to be in the Philippines and meet Filipino-Chinese, I will make the effort to learn and speak Hokkien because I take pride in the Hokkien dialect as this is the language spoken by my elders and is part of the ethnic and cultural identity of Filipino-Chinese,'.... '{My current residence in the Philippines is Bulacan and I do not meet any Filipino-Chinese anywhere in Bulacan who speak Hokkien,'.... '{I hope that the Filipino-Chinese in the Philippines realize the importance of the Hokkien dialect,'.... 'and the importance of doing their part in PRESERVING the Hokkien dialect in the Philippines before the language dies from indifference ('or 'yung walang pakialam'),'....----- Jason Sy (18Nov2022, Friday, 1:30 am) (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia): 💓🇸🇦🇸🇦
Hii I love your videos!!
She's full chinese??? She looks pinoy tho 😆❤️
hahaha yess
just tanned. i have a cousin as well who is just a little tanned but is pure ethnic chinese, but afaik, lived in the philippines all his life
love this video
Me ganun pala binibili apelyedo? 🤯 More info please... New subscriber na ko 😂
Ahh that's why my great grandfather is nagchange ng apelyido 🤔
Language switching real quick 😱😱😱😱
In my opinion, nakakahiya lalo na pag ‘di ka marunong magchinese (中文)tapos alam ng ibang tao na half chinese ka kasi first of all, ‘yan ang ginagamit na basis ng ibang tao, I mean ‘yan ‘yong parang nagsisilbing proof na may lahi ka talagang chinese which is nangyari sa akin. *cries* Pero ngayon, I know naman na how to speak Mandarin (Not that pro tho). Fookien nalang fights na lol.
(a) (Hokkien dialect ~ 'beautiful Chinese dialect' ~ 'Philippine Hokkien'): 'As a community grows and expands, the language spoken by the community should grow as well,'.... '(Sadly from what I've read and viewed on-line,'.... 'the spread and growth of the Fukien language isn't growing in direct proportion to the Filipino-Chinese community's growth in population,'.... '(This is what research academic studies have discovered,'.... 'That Hokkien is a dying language in the Philippines,'.... "(I am a firm believer that reversing this trend is still possible,'.... 'if enough people in the community cared,'.... "{That there should be a campaign in the Philippines among Filipino-Chinese to make speaking Hokkien cool,'.... 'like what is being done right now in Singapore,'.... '(It is the whole community that should come together to PRESERVE the Hokkien language,'.... 'because one generation alone cannot carry out this task,'.... '(Like in Singapore, Generation Z youngsters post and upload videos on TH-cam on speaking Hokkien with their peers and other Gen Zers,'.... '{What can the older generation of Hokkien-speaking people do???'..... '{Well, one possible action Filipino-Chinese parents can do,'.... 'is to INSIST on using Fukien at home in order to keep the language robust and alive,'.... "(The only way to ENSURE a language's survival is CONTINUED USE,'.... 'and being PASSED ON from generation to generation,'.... '(Hokkien is a spoken language that is handed down from generation to generation,'.... '(How can the Millennials (Generation Y) and Gen Zers (Generation Z) of Filipino-Chinese,'.... 'pass on the spoken dialect of Hokkien to succeeding generations,'.... 'if presently they are not taking an ACTIVE INTEREST in speaking Hokkien,'.... 'and not speaking it amongst themselves,???'....---- Jason Sy (18Nov2022, Fri, 2:30 am) (Dhahran, Saudi Arabia) 💓🇸🇦🇸🇦
more chinoy vidss
Sure! I'll try to make more :)
Not all apply that Chinese marry only Chinese. I’m girl but I don’t marry Chinese guy
Chinoy snacks vid pls. The baons we get hahaha
You are can speak hokkien ????
yes :)
@@YennKathleen # oke...kamsia..wa xi teochew...indonesia
*Mas mukhang Pinay ung nasa right,Kasi morena skin*
part 2 !!! mataas naman views sayang :P
Yung mukha pang pinoy yung full chinese 🤣🤣🤣 anyways this part 4:23 i remember my friend told me their real surname is ong but they have to changed it a filipino surname i thought shes joking lol
Chinese Filipinos are usually thrifty. Saving money is one of the important things to learn at a young age.
how many population chinese in pilipino ?
Im not sure, maybe around 30%? Thats my guess
there's no official ethnic census in the philippines, so realistically, nobody knows, but national geographic made a study around last 2005 saying that around 36% of the average filipino genepool is east asian
ur doing the momo language!!!!
More hokkien vids🔥🔥🔥
Can you speak Chinese or read han characters?
Yes!
Yenn Kathleen
你真的认识汉字?
@@henrylau1743 是的 😄
@@henrylau1743 but im more familiar with traditional chinese characters than simplified 😄
Yenn Kathleen
這很簡單,切換一下輸入法就可以了
Like 27% of pinoys, i also have chinese blood, pero di na obvious/prominent lol
At any rate, i dated two foreign chinese (mainland). Yung isa, open na foreigner/pinoy BF ng anak nila. Yung isa, di mashado pero courteous naman. In fact kahit chinoy, or foreign-based chinese (non-mainlander), hindi nila kino-consider as 'true' chinese. The usual banana label, yellow outside but white/westernized inside, no offense
Paano manligaw ng chinese girl
Dapat pogi sarile mo muna
bakit ba ayaw ng mga Chinese ipaligaw yung mga babaeng chinese samin pero sa ibang lahi boto kayo i'm so getting jealous ang unfair naman ng life!
In a Chinese family, the parents are the head of the business. Hence, they are the treasurer of the house. In a Filipino family, the kids provide for their parents the moment they start working. They also provide support to other relatives who may be in need.’ In short, she is concerned that the Filipino partner will get money from the business pot to provide for his/her family. Hope this enlightens you :)
@Packo_ Hubu yeah
@Packo_ Hubu wo ming bai le :)
@Packo_ Hubu bao qian Kung nilahat ko hahaha
@Alexander Dumas-Montechristo agree kasi kuya ko half Chinese kasi Daddy nya Chinese magkaiba kami ng Daddy maharot kasi Mommy ko haha🤣 lagi akong pinapagalitan ang tamad-tamad ko daw naalala ko nung 15 years old sya nag working student sya ako 10 years old hindi ko hinugasan yung Plato at hindi ako nag saing ayon pinagalitan nya ako nag tatrabaho na daw sya .
Tapos sya parin daw mag luluto at mag huhugas ng Plato love na love ko kuya ko ang Bait nya Kuripot nga lang haha😆
Sabi ng mama ko, Quieng raw talaga surname namin. Naging King nung nagpapalit sa lolo na ng Father ko. Now I know the reason behind it hahaha
Sayang lang namatay na daddy namin agad kaya di kami na-expose sa chinese thing.
Kaya pala medyo singkit yung mata mo
Miss u
We wear red din every birthday + airplane flights
HAKAW
miss you too
Ayye shoutout
Go jamba go jamba
Bkit kaya karamihan sa mga batang Chinoy ngyon hnd masyadong marunong mag Chinese.
bka mag mandarin haha
Dahil mga 3rd or 4th generation na mga batang yan. Kahit mga magulang nyan, hirap na rin umintindi ng chinese. Kaya nga hindi bumabalik ng tsina. Dahil for every succeeding generation na nagsstay mas lalong nagiging assimilated sila at mas lalong hindi nakakarelate sa tsina.
eh syempre, buhay pinas, di naman kailangan magchinese. ung salita ng mga boomer at matatanda, hokkien ung salita tapos di rin un ung tinuturo sa eskuwela. sa eskuwela, turo ung mandarin na sino ba gumagamit? ung mga bagong dating or turistang taidioka mainlanders lang o hongkonger o taiwanese
Nice po
What school ka sa hs?
Chiang kai shek college :)
@@YennKathleen oh Chiang Kai!! Taga GCC ako during HD now DLSU Shs na ako :)
@@oscarcyber3308 oh nice!!
Mga hokien ba kayo??
yes :)
@@YennKathleen mas oik ata yung tagalog na chiness accent.. tulad sa mga palabas
Chinese Filipino is the right term, not Filipino Chinese
ako lolo ko kastila pero hnd ko nmn inicip n mestisa ako...pinoy lng ako
Hoy, bat parati kitang nakikita nag cocoment sa mga video na may instik, galit ka ba sa mga instik?
Pag lolo mo na ang kastila hindi ka na mestisa. Sa pag kakaalam ko kasi ang mestisa eh half. 1/4 kana
HELOOO AHHA
lol
Ako may dugong Intsik din ako dahil both of my Grandparents are Chinese. All of my Uncles and Aunties are big businessmen. And dey went to a Chinese school as well. But my heart is a Filipino. At hindi ko gusto ginagawa ng mga taga-Mainland Chinese sa bansa natin. No way! Filipinos are for Filipinos. Not for Chinese. Fil-Chi. will do. But not to be controlled by Chinese becoz dis country is for Filipinos only! Whether Muslim or Interracial, this land belongs to us Filipinos.
!!!!!! Yeesss!!!! 👏👏👏
Mababa ang tingin ng mga chinese sa pinoy kaya ayaw nila makapag asawa ng pinoy ang anak nila specially the girls. Yun ang real reason behind that. Ididisown ang anak pag nag asawa ng pinoy. Maraming ganyan na tsinoy. Filipino citizen kayo, dapat hindi ganon ang mentality nyo. Dapat idisown din layo ng philippines at palayasin. May kilala ako chinese na ganon daw tlaga cla. Ung iba pa nga, ang tingin nila sa pinoy ay hindi tao. Ginagamit lang nila ang filipino zitizen pag kailangan nila pero pag sila sila lang chinese sila
In whole conversation u people talk in half English and rest of language in other ..may be Chinese or Philippine couldn't understand a single word😔
Back to Basic.......... 😉
The description says it's Tagalog ( Philippines ) :)
dont worry im working on putting english subtitles in the cc :)
Yenn Kathleen good idea,useful for people like me, now I thinking which topic u will get for us 😃 foe next video 😯but surely the topic must not be between Japanese V😠s Philippine or Korea V😠s Philippine 😂😂😂.Moreover thanks, this time no one came behind u😆😆😆😉.bye. take care till next video. ❤
Hello👋 good morning ka Lodi
Ganda pala pakingan ang MandaLog😂👏
New subscriber here
Parang d aman sila Chinese...madaming pilipino n mukhang chinese
kasi maraming pilipino na may halong chinese na dating dati pa na kinalimutan na ng pamilya nila kasi wala na pakialam pamilya na un sa origins ng pamilya nila
6:52 Interestingly, one of you is not pure chinese (1/2), meaning may tumawid ng 'great wall' sa magulang nyo ;)
Hokkien is a dying language in the Philippines, most Chinoy cannot speak it anymore. most speak a "pidgin" dialect, a mixture of English, filipino and hokkien.
Where have u been ,this 3rd week goingon, not a single video yet😦
你好
你好 哈哈哈
菲律宾华人真的是不一样。太严格了吧。