dampò 1v To touch. Konò ogkohingaran ka lituratu to komos su warò koy nigdampò woy ko nigdi-ok. We wouldn’t call a photograph a [finger/foot] print because we had not touched it or stepped on [it]. see: dagkot 1. 2v To trap catch in one's cupped hands in a downward motion or against something motion as when catching a frog or a lizard. 3vt To lay something on top of something else such as a cold cloth which is laid on someone’s body. Ka batò no ogdaralu no mo-init lagboy, ogdampo-on ta to mahagsil no mohumil on ka lawa rin. As for the child who is very hot, we lay something cool on his body which will cool off his body. 3.1vt To lay one’s hands on someone as when praying for him/her. [But if hands are placed on shoulder's, the term used would be gongonan.] 3.2v To hold with ones' hands, or paws in the case of a dog. Ka asu, ogdampo-on to bolad din ka bokog oyow ogka-ayunan no ogkobkob. As for a dog, it holds onto the bone with its paws (lit. hands) so that he can manage to gnaw on [it]. 4v To sit on top of, as a frog might hop and sit on its own eggs. No ian ku pigkita ka inoy [to bakbak] no ogdampa-an din ka mgo atolug din no nighulunan to makut. Ungod oghalinhalin to og-a-ambotut ka ogpandilo-dilò. Pogdampò din ogpandilò. What I saw was the mother [frog] who was sitting on her eggs on which red ants were gathering...She was always moving as she hopped about [and] licked up [the ants]. [At each] hop, she was licking. 5v To put down, demean.
Search results for "humil"
humil adj Cool, or cooled down. Ko nigdaralu ka batò ganna to masolom, mo-init lagboy. Ko a las nuibi on, no oghutukon ta no ogdampò no mohumil on ka lawa rin. Nig-itu-oson ka mo-init din. When the child was ill a while ago [this] morning, he was very hot. When it was nine o'clock already, his body was already cooled down. [as of cement that has cooled of but is still warm to the touch. or a child whose fever has dropped.] see fr.: maga-inallow.
maga-inallow adj lukewarm, as water Ko maga-inaldow ka woig, konò amana no mo-init. If the water is lukewarm, it isn't very hot. [About the warmth that you could dip your finger in without being burned. DB says this term is used only of water and is not used of objects that have become warmed by the sun. (Those things would be mo-init.) Of cement it would be said that it had become mohumil “moderately warm”, but the sense is somewhat different in that it seems to refer to something that has cooled off. (see humil.)] see: humil.