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please....caue it is really difficult....but might be easier if you explain it to me !!!!!!!

2007-01-03 03:39:45 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

7 answers

bili is the rootword of every verb you used. bili means buy.

bilhin is used when you want someone to buy something you asked. like bilhin mo yung pink sneakers. "buy the pink sneakers." it is always used when the subject is not the doer of te sentence. In this case, the pink sneakers can't buy itself right? so it clearly isnt the doer of the sentence although it is the subject. mo goes after bilhin because mo is a pronoun which indicates "you- singular person" but mo is never used as a subject. if i can remember, its called 2nd person pronoun like them, her, etc.

binili- binili niya ang mundo. He bought the world. in this case, ang mundo is the subject but it is not the doer (again) so another 2nd person pronoun is used, niya. Maybe you'll understand it if we used the form with "ay". Ang mundo ay binili niya. In strict english terms, this sentence is The world is bought by him. so here, the world is the subject and the buyer (doer of the act) is him (2nd person) just like niya. it may be easier for you if you understand the "ay" form and learn to invert it from there because english syntax is so much like the "ay" form.

binibili- just like the previous one but is in present progressive form, meaning the doer (not necessarily the subject) is doing the act. its like adding -ing in a root word.

bibilhin is like bilhin also but in present progressive form

bumili is bought. She bought a camera. Bumili siya ng camera. or siya ay bumili ng camera. The subject and doer is Siya (or she) that's why bumili is used. You cant use binili siya ng camera because that would mean the camera bought her.

bibili is the future tense. bibili ako ng camera. I will buy a camera. bibili is used when the subject and the doer is one and the same. you cant say bibilhin ako ng camera because tat would mean the camera will buy me.

2007-01-03 03:58:53 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

Bili - buy (root word)

Binili / bumili - bought (past tense)
Binibili / bumibili- buying, is/are buying (present/ present progressive)
Bibilihin / Bibili - will buy (future)

2007-01-04 07:36:24 · answer #2 · answered by just me 4 · 0 0

Bili bilhin bo bibili banana bana bo binibili fe fi mo bumili. In your question I see that only Bili is capitalized so that makes it the proper name.

2007-01-03 03:49:34 · answer #3 · answered by Eva 5 · 1 2

Seems to be tagalog:

bilhin: acquire; buy; purchase
binili: bought
bumili: bought; buy; purchase

Then you should asked Filipinos or check a grammar of Tagalog to find more about the variations of the verbs according to the subject and tense.

2007-01-03 03:48:42 · answer #4 · answered by Reindeer Herder 4 · 3 0

Bibili

2016-12-17 08:51:24 · answer #5 · answered by samrov 4 · 0 0

bili- present
bilhin-future
binili-past
binibili-perfect past
bibilhin- perfect future

2007-01-03 07:25:45 · answer #6 · answered by lanisoderberg69 4 · 0 0

Are you OK my friend? :-)

2007-01-03 03:41:58 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

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