Sociology, asked by bryanjamesbueno0, 3 months ago

How the Digital era has change the lives of Pinoy's ​

Answers

Answered by anamikasharma3049
0

Answer:

The disruption on broadcast television is slowly trickling down from the U.S. to the Philippines.

Answered by nancychaterjeestar29
1

Answer:

Pinoy is a common informal self-reference used by the Filipinos to refer to citizens of Philippines and their culture as well as the overseas Filipinos in the Filipino diaspora. A Pinoy with the mix of foreign Caucasian ancestry is often informally called the Tisoy, a shortened word for Mestizo.

Many Filipinos refer to themselves as the Pinoy, sometimes feminine Pinay , instead of standard term Filipino. Filipino is widespread formal word used to call a citizen of Philippines. Pinoy is formed by taking last four letters of Filipino and adding diminutive suffix -y in Tagalog language . Pinoy was used for self-identification by the first wave of Filipinos going to continental United States before World War II and has been used both in a pejorative sense and as the term of endearment, similar to Desi.

Pinoy was created to differentiate experiences of those immigrating to the United States, but is now a slang term used to refer to all the people of Filipino descent. "Pinoy music" impacted the socio-political climate of 1970s and was employed by both Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos and the People Power Revolution that an overthrew his regime. Recent mainstream usages tend to the center on entertainment (Pinoy Big Brother) that can be watched on Pinoy Tambayan and the music (Pinoy Idol), which have played a significant role in developing national and the cultural identity.

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