banulaloy 1n Kind of soft, fragrant wood similar to mahogony has a reddish center. It used to make boats or roof shingles. 2n Name of a village on the Libogonan River between Togop and Magguiimon. 3v For a horse to rear or stand up on its hind legs. Ko konò ogko-iniat ka kuddò no oghipanow, ungod ogbabanualoy ka ogtawalang ka oghipanow. If a horse doesn’t want to travel (lit. walk), it continually rears up as it trys to shake off the reins as it walks. [Term applies whether horse rears in rebellion or if trained to do so.]
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so-sò 1v To ineffectively slash with a bolo or pound rice (as with a dull bolo or as by a young child, or as by someone who doesn’t know how). Ogso-so-on now to bibinayu. You don’t know how to pound rice well. 2A kind of wood which is used in rice fetish. 3To split lengths of bamboo so that they aren’t cut all the way through, but can be easily flattened out to form shingles or walling. 4Bamboo that has been split and flattened; shingles.
sugkip v 1To slide something between the roof shingles. Igsugkip ka sugkad. Slide the comb between the shingles. 2To roll eyes so pupils are hidden, or to tuck tobacco under one’s upper lip. Ogpasugkipon ka mata. [He] is rolling [his] eyes [up into his head]. Pakasugkip to mata noy. We roll our eyes under the lids. Pasugkipon ka mata. [A child was doing that deliberately with his eyes so just the white showed. Arlyn says that is what happens when a person becomes unconscious and the eyes roll back so the pupil does not show.]