@jeffkrauss
Ah, mas mahusay ka palang mag-Google kaysa mag-Tagalog. 😄
Just a tip on grammar -
When you’re using the verb “al
ám”, find out if there is a verb that comes after it.
If there is none, you use “alam ko/namin/mo/ninyo/niya/nila ...”. Any one of those pronouns is the actor, the verb is “know”, and the rest will just be the object of “alam”.
For example:
AL
ÁM NIL
Á ang pang
alan mo. = They know your name.
AL
ÁM KO kung kail
án ang birthday niy
á. = I know when his/her birthday is.
If there is a verb after “alam”, then you have 2 clauses that now need to be connected using the linker “na”, which translates to “that”.
ALAM NILA NA Jeff ang pangalan mo. = They KNOW THAT your name IS Jeff. (The 2nd verb is not obvious in Tagalog though.)
ALAM KO NA magal
íng kang MANAG
ALOG. = I KNOW THAT you SPEAK TAGALOG well.
As the linker, the “na” can now be connected to the word before it. Hence you can say them as:
Alam NILANG Jeff ang pangalan mo.
Alam KONG magaling kang managalog.
Now, look at your reply to me again and see how you can grammatically improve it based on what I explained above. 🤔