Search result(s) - kápog

kápog

Hiligaynon

(B) Cold cooked rice. May kápog kamó sa baláy? Have you any cold rice in the house? (see báhaw).


báhaw

Hiligaynon

(H) Cold rice, cold food; to become cold (of food); to be cold or indifferent (as regards religion, etc.). May báhaw kamó? Have you any cold rice? Ang kán-on nagbáhaw na. The rice has got cold. Pamáhaw-to breakfast, eat cold food, from the fact that the rice taken at breakfast has usually been cooked the day before. (see kápog, táhaw, búgnaw).


kakápog

Hiligaynon

(B) Staleness, insipidity, insipidness, tastelessness, mawkishness, condition of cold cooked food, especially applied to rice. (see kápog, kabáhaw).


kaló-kálo

Hiligaynon

Cold rice warmed up and stirred in a pan either with or without lard; to warm up rice in the manner described. Kalókalóha ang kán-on. Warm the rice and stir it in the pan. Kalókalóhi akó sing kápog. Make me a dish of "kalókálo" from cold rice. Ikalókálo akó ánay siníng báhaw. Kindly prepare me a dish of kalókálo from this cold rice.


kápug

Hiligaynon

Cold (cooked) rice. See kápog.



makápog

Hiligaynon

(B) Stale, cold, old (of rice, etc.). (see kápog, mabáhaw).


kabáhaw

Hiligaynon

Staleness, vapidity, insipidness, quality of food that has been left standing for some time. (báhaw; see kakápog). (Also: religious coldness or indifference, tepidity).