Ibaloi
A language of Philippines
| Population | 111,000 (1990 census). |
| Region | Luzon, central and south Benguet Province, west Nueva Vizcaya Province. |
| Language map |
Northern Philippines, reference number 34 |
| Alternate names | Benguet-Igorot, Ibadoy, Ibaloy, Igodor, Inibaloi, Nabaloi |
| Dialects | Daklan, Kabayan, Bokod. |
| Classification | Austronesian, Malayo-Polynesian, Philippine, Northern Luzon, Meso-Cordilleran, South-Central Cordilleran, Southern Cordilleran, West Southern Cordilleran, Nuclear Southern Cordilleran, Ibaloy |
| Language development | Literacy rate in L1: 75%–100%. Literacy rate in L2: 75%–100%. NT: 1978. |
| Writing system | Latin script. |
Entries from the SIL Bibliography about this language:
Academic Publications
BALLARD, Arlene, author. 1979. How the Ibaloi language reflects the basic values behavioral profile.
BALLARD, D. Lee, author. 1966. "Inibaloi onomatopoeia."
BALLARD, D. Lee, author. 1974. "The semantics of Inibaloi verbal affixes."
BALLARD, D. Lee, author. 1978. Inibaloi metaphors.
BALLARD, Lee, compiler. 2011. Ibaloy dictionary.
BERG, René van den; SHORE, Susan, authors. 2006. "A new mass elicitation technique: the dictionary development program."
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WALROD, Michael R., author. 2006. The marker is the message: the influence of discourse markers and particles on textual meaning.
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Vernacular Publications
Epangdon ashalen asan kita manbasa. 1975.
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Manbasa kita: Inibaloi of Mountain Province. n.d.
Ngantoy pengikowan ko shi Ibaloi, Ilocano, Pilipino, English (How I’ll say it in Ibaloi, Ilocano, Pilipino and English: a phrase book for Ibaloi). 1976.
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