Hiligaynon
To follow closely without going beyond, be barely sufficient; just enough without anything to spare, living from hand to mouth. Ginaabátabát gid lang ang ámon pagkáon. We just manage to live from hand to mouth. The food we can procure is hardly enough to keep us alive. Ang ámon kinitáan abátabát gid lang sa ámon pangabúhì. Our earnings are barely enough for our living.
Hiligaynon
Very poor, pauper, indigent, destitute, penniless, needy, necessitous, distressed, straitened, pinched, penurious; to be or become very poor, suffer great privations, etc. Dungúl siá nga táo, kay abátabát gid lámang kag kamús-kamús ang íya pagkáon. He is very poor, for he really lives only from hand to mouth. (N.B. Dungúl supposes a greater degree of poverty than either ímol or póbre).
Hiligaynon
Living from hand to mouth, etc. See abátabát.
Hiligaynon
Freq. of kamúskamús-to live from hand to mouth, to have barely enough to live on. (see abátabát).
Hiligaynon
Dim. and Freq. of sunád. (see abátábat, apás-ápas, ilóg-*ílog).
Hiligaynon
Hiligaynon
Hiligaynon
Dim. and Freq. of ábat. Also: to follow up, follow from place to place. Ginabátábat sang mga polís ang makáwat túbtub nga íla madakúp (nadakúp). The police followed the thief from place to place till they caught him. Abát-abáton nínyo ang duhá ka pamatán-on nga nagtabanáy túbtub nga ínyo makítà kag ibálik nínyo dirí silá nga duhá. Follow the two young people that have eloped till you find them and bring the two of them back here. (see sunúdsúnud).