Hiligaynon
See kapág-on. Also: Things that are stable or give stability.
Hiligaynon
Detritus, fine sand and earth, slime, deposit, sediment, mud carried along by running water, especially during a flood, and deposited somewhere else; chaff, empty ears of rice, etc. Also verb. Nalay-onán ang ámon áwang, kay naágyan sang bahâ. Our well was filled up with mud, because the flood passed over it. Linay-onán sang subâ ang ámon dútà. The river covered our land with a deposit of mud. (see búnbun, bagónbon, laó, lalaó, lúnang).
Hiligaynon
To cook fish, meat, etc. in very little water mixed with vinegar and various spices. The concoction (inon-onán) is usually served with little or no sauce. On-oní ang ísdà. Cook the fish in the ón-on way. Isdà nga inon-onán. A dish of highly seasoned fish.
Hiligaynon
To cook fish, meat, etc. in very little water mixed with vinegar and various spices. The concoction (inon-onán) is usually served with little or no sauce. On-oní ang ísdà. Cook the fish in the ón-on way. Isdà nga inon-onán. A dish of highly seasoned fish.
Hiligaynon
To make or get strong, firm, solid, to strengthen, reinforce, brace, stiffen. Pag-oná ang baláy mo. Strengthen your house. Nagpág-on siá sang íya baláy. He made his house strong. Nagpág-on na ang íya baláy, kay ginkaáyo sang pánday. His house is now strong for it was repaired by the carpenter. Ginpág-on nilá ang íla nga kabubút-on. They made up their minds firmly. Napag-onán akó siníng baláy. This house seems strong to me. (see líg-on).
Hiligaynon
Hiligaynon
(H) Privy, etc. (see komún, lubô, palamus-ónan, palangipotán, palanlibángan).
Hiligaynon
To cover with sand and earth, to bar the flow of a water-course in order that the earth and sand carried along by a flood may accumulate behind the weir (levee, dam, dyke) and so raise the level of the water or divert the flood to another channel. Ginpalay-onán níla ang sapâ. They built a weir across the brook.
Hiligaynon
(Sp. fianza) Surety, bail, bond, guarantee, security. Mangítà ka sing piánsa. Find bail. (see kalig-onán).
Hiligaynon
(Sp. firmar) Firm, firm-name; signature, sign manual; to sign, subscribe, put one's signature to. Walâ pa siá makapírma, kay may kasablágan siá. He has not been able to sign yet, for he has been detained (occupied, engaged, busy with something else, prevented or impeded). Pirmahí iní. Sign this. Put your signature to this. Napirmahán na balá ang kalig-onán? Is the document signed? Has the document (deed) been signed?
Hiligaynon
(Sp. recibo) Receipt, deed; to make out a receipt or deed. Resibóhi ang ákon ginbáyad sa ímo. Make out a receipt for what I have paid you. Ginresibóhan níya ang dútà nga ákon ginprénda sa íya. He made out a deed for the land I mortgaged to him. (see kalig-onán, dokuménto).
Hiligaynon
(Sp. título) Title; heading; epithet, claim, right, warrant. (see diplóma, pamúnò, kamunóan, hayô, katarúngan, kalig-onán, tungúd, bangúd).
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