Phuck if I know.
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The Philippines were named after a Spanish king, King Phillip, or Felippe in Spanish. Given that the country was first controlled by the Spanish for ages, then the Americans, I'm guessing that at first the Spanish name for both the people and the territory was used, but when the Americans took over, the English-ified name of the territory was used, while the Spanish name for the people stuck as colonial powers use the name for the territory more often? Perhaps the Filipino diaspora also plays a role in this. I don't know, just my guess.
English, misspelling and never admitting mistakes go hand in hand.
Don't forget 'far too inconvenient to correct now'
And is pronounced "Pilipino" by most Filipinos. But my Filipino wife, who grew up in South Carolina, had a friend who said "Flippin-o". So that's what we say now, lol.
"Flippin-o" sounds like if a kids show tried to create a fake curse word, so they could curse on air, without being fined by the FCC.
It's all a bunch of smoo!
That's not because of the spelling but because of the language. Just like Indonesian, the language doesn't distinguish between f and p, because they're basically the same letter (one is a plosive and one is a fricative but that's it). In Indonesian you'll hear fancake and coppee, for example.
I knew a Pilipino family that seemed to pronounce it both ways.
I tend to think it’s due to those around them. Like this kid I knew from school who came from the UK; with us as his friends, he had an American accent like the rest of us. But as soon as he talked to his parents or his sister, he had this heavy English accent. He seemed to be aware of it but had no control over it.
I had no idea either but I did find this while Googling(Kagi-ing?)
https://grammarphobia.com/blog/2010/04/why-is-filipino-spelled-with-an-f.html
Use a better search like Bing or duckduckgo. googol sucks and was never any good.
Back in my day we used to call it "searching"
Here's a Nintendo game. It's Halo for the Xbox360.
You could easily replace 'googling' to 'Interneting'.
Instead of googling, I say searching it up
'Interneting' does not suggest using a search engine
People that use Kagi are the Harvard grads of search engine users
How did this question never occur to me before? Now i need to know the answer too
Lol
Guangzhou is spelled with the Pinyin
But the local language is not called "Guangzhouese", its Cantonese, but the city is not called "Canton"
lmao
Also: Petition to rename my city to "Filadelfia" 🤭
Canton was originally the transliterated name for the province of Guangdong, which is why the language is called Cantonese in English, from guǎngdōnghuà.
The name Canton being applied to Guangzhou came later.
it was an Spanish colony for 300 years, Filipino is the Spanish spelling, and probably stuck, in English would have been "Philippine"
I always remember the 'pp' by imagining it as some suburban estate. "Philip Pines"
That is exactly what I do.
Does your brain also say it with the same voice as "Reticulating Splines" from SimCity?
The only relevant spelling is the original language.
What foreigners are doing in their languages has no meaning. You can spell it however you like, change it every year etc.
Do you mean Spanish or Tagalog?
That would be latin ? I'm pretty sure that's where "Phillipines" originates.
Greek name meaning he who likes horses, the name of Alexander the great's father, then a Spanish King's who colonized the islands.
Therefore actually spelled with a Φ and the issue being different transliterations of it.
Probably something to do with Tagalog vs English, and the English named the Philippines