Search results for "payak"

kayabkab intrans. to flap wings. Pakaognam nan payak nan manok te kumayabkab. Hold the chicken’s wings well because they’ll flap. ‑um‑/‑imm‑. 2B Movement, change of position. Sim: payagpag. (sem. domains: 1.6.4.1 - Animal movement.)

hokla trans. to pull something apart; to pull off a part of something, often used in reference to preparing a chicken for cooking. Hoklaom nan manuk ta ihaang mu. Pull apart the chicken and cook it. Humokla kah ittay nah abala ta itbong mu. Pull off a bit of the chicken breast and broil it. Hoklaom di payak nan manuk. Detach the wings of the chicken. general: Lambrecht in his Ifugaw-English dictionary relates this action to the tearing-apart of the entrails of a chicken or pig to examine the bile-sac during a divination ritual. ‑on/‑in‑, ‑um‑/‑imm‑. 4A Change the structure of an object. (sem. domains: 7.5.2.4 - Remove, take apart.)

payak 1comm. the wings of birds or poultry. Nagi-uy payak nan hamuti an linattik nan unga. The wing of the bird that the child hit with a slingshot is broken. (sem. domains: 1.6.2.1 - Parts of a bird.) 2proc. refers to the process of growing wings. Mungkapayakan nan gawgawa. The wings of the duck are starting to grow. mungka‑ ‑an.