Search by property
From BASAbaliWiki
This page provides a simple browsing interface for finding entities described by a property and a named value. Other available search interfaces include the page property search, and the ask query builder.
List of results
- Ketipat + (Wow… my neighbor on the east, if Ramadan he/she brings ketupat (diamond shape rice cake), dates.)
- Dangin + (Wow… my neighbor on the east, if Ramadan he/she brings ketupat (diamond shape rice cake), dates.)
- Plasahang + (Yan, flatten the rice fields first, dad will help you to the rice fields later.)
- Yan + (Yan, get Grandma some rice please.)
- Puyung + (Yes, it's about time to harvest. If not, the crops will quickly fall by the wayside and will be eaten by the birds.)
- I +
- Cekuh + (Yoga: What are the ingredients? Ayu: Chili, shrimp paste, tomato, garlic, shallot, red hot chili, ginger, cutcherry, shrimp paste, salt, and sugar.)
- Maruket-ruketan + (Young men struggle to watch concerts in the field.)
- Numbuk + (andi every afternoon pounded rice in the kitchen)
- Makenta + (because his girlfriend dumped him, he didn't eat for three days)
- Makenta + (because his girlfriend dumped him, he didn't eat for three days)
- Pulet + (blackboard tree, devil tree, ditabark, milkwood-pine, white cheesewood)
- Susuban + (dodi stepped on the bamboo until it was hit by thorns in the rice fields)
- Nambakin + (grandfather prevents rice water from overflowing)
- Laad + (it was once the home of a former rice field)
- Cacah + (mother cooks rice containing sweet potatoes.)
- Gebeh + (mother makes rice offerings for gebeh.)
- Balang sangit + (my rice in the fields is affected by the plague bug)
- Kuah + (on the way to her house, Sarah was given rice and soup.)
- Sekul + (remember the offerings are filled with white rice)
- Sekul + (remember the offerings are filled with white rice)
- Konkon + (tell him to come here to get rice)
- Konkon + (tell him to come here to get rice)
- Rare + (the children play in the yard)
- Pijit + (why do you bring a little rice seeds to the fields ?)
- Aa + (yes, i will go home now)
- Manteg + (yesterday morning my mother hit rice in the rice fields)
- Aa + (Yes, since three days ago, they were harvesting at the southern rice field area.)
- Aa + (Yes, since three days ago, they were harvesting at the southern rice field area.)
- I + (Yes, since three days ago, they were harvesting at the southern rice field area.)
- I + (Yes, since three days ago, they were harvesting at the southern rice field area.)
- Lamak + ("A lamak is a long narrow ritual hanging t … "A lamak is a long narrow ritual hanging that is an essential requirement at almost all rituals in Bali. It is hung from altars and shrines at temple festivals and on festive holy days. Made usually of palm leaves, it is by nature ephemeral and it is made time and again. Even though permanent forms of the lamak, made of cloth or coins, do exist, the ephemeral palm leaf form must be present. Sometimes reaching a length of several metres and decorated with a range of motifs, its most elaborate forms are made by specialist craftsmen and women. The lamak serves as base for offerings and attracts deities and deified ancestors to them. Decorative motifs representing sources of life are ordered according to Balinese concepts of the vertical structure of the cosmos. Best known among the motifs is the cili, a human figure in female form that symbolizes human fertility and regeneration. Through offerings and the active role of the lamak, worshippers offer thanks to their deities and request prosperity and protection.ies and request prosperity and protection.)
- Malasti + ("Most villages in Bali perform a Melasti ( … "Most villages in Bali perform a Melasti (or also know as Mekiyis) ritual cleansing of their communities anywhere between 4 to 2 days before Nyepi, the day of total silence. But not so far from Ubud, in the area encompassing Blahbatuh, Keramas , and surroundings, this ritual takes place after Nyepi, on the full moon of the tenth month – purnama kedasa – on Saba beach. Melasti involves everyone in the community, and the village deities Susuhunan are brought down too."e deities Susuhunan are brought down too.")
- Aduh + ("Ouch" Adi said when hit by a basketball in front of the field.)
- Padi + ((proverb) If you plant rice, the seedling is also rice. Refers to the fact that a child of a parent that has good characteristics is likely to have the same good characteristics. See also yeh.)
- Ungkulin + ((proverb) Like a god that has dirty cloth … (proverb) Like a god that has dirty cloth hung over him.</br>Emper-emper are strips of dirty cloth that are used to fence in an area, on the theory that nobody would walk under dirty clothes. Sometimes used as a scarecrow. Ungkulin means to hang over something.</br>If you hang emper-emper over a god, he will never come close to you. This refers to someone who is always distant and never friendly. It is also used as a moral for children: never put emper-emper over a shrine.dren: never put emper-emper over a shrine.)
- Dewa + ((proverb) Like a god that has dirty cloth … (proverb) Like a god that has dirty cloth hung over him.</br>Emper-emper are strips of dirty cloth that are used to fence in an area, on the theory that nobody would walk under dirty clothes. Sometimes used as a scarecrow. Ungkulin means to hang over something.</br>If you hang emper-emper over a god, he will never come close to you. This refers to someone who is always distant and never friendly. It is also used as a moral for children: never put emper-emper over a shrine.dren: never put emper-emper over a shrine.)
- Padi + ((proverb) Like the life of rice. When empt … (proverb) Like the life of rice. When empty it stand up. When full it looks down.</br>This implies that a know-it-al person who talks a lot may not actually know much - i.e. have an empty head. But a wise person, who looks down at his feet all of the time, like a mature head of rice, may know a lot , but may say little. However, he is the wiser of the two.ttle. However, he is the wiser of the two.)
- Nasi + ((proverb) The sickest possible rice pot still eats rice. Said to a person who pretends to be sick, but who still eats a lot. One who is really sick does not want to eat.)
- Gelem-geleman + ((proverb) The sickest possible rice pot still eats rice. Said to a person who pretends to be sick, but who still eats a lot. One who is really sick does not want to eat.)
- Gelem + ((proverb) The sickest possible rice pot still eats rice. Said to a person who pretends to be sick, but who still eats a lot. One who is really sick does not want to eat.)
- Padi + ((proverb) like rice that has seeds on it. … (proverb) like rice that has seeds on it.</br>If a person is "cara padine mabuah" he is very smart, and he pretends to be stupid and not show his knowledge and capabilities. He is silent because he does not want to show off. He does not want anything, as in "belog magandong". He just does not want to discuss things with others, because he knows that this will lead to questions and then arguments, and he wants to be at peace and left alone.nd he wants to be at peace and left alone.)
- Entil + (1. Every Ulian (4 days after) Galungan, the people in Batungsel Village make 'entil'. 2. The way he carried it was neat. 3. The baby sleeps very well.)
- Sampi + (A farmer is plowing his rice field with the help of a couple of Bali cattle. Rice farmers in Bali still employ Bali cattles to plow their rice fields.)
- Plelubangan + (According to the 'plelubangan', tomorrow is not good as the day begins to plant rice.)
- Karungin + (Add the rice into the sack.)
- Dangsah + (After arriving at the flat area he stopped.)
- Ababan + (After being pounded, the rice that has been taken by the stem stalks is filtered.)
- Ngasal + (After school, I helped my mother become a laborer to cut rice in the fields.)
- Panglukatan + (After the harvest season ends, it’s time to make some offerings at the rice field and asking for holy water together.)
- Upon-upon + (After the harvest season ends, it’s time to make some offerings at the rice field and asking for holy water together.)
- Carik + (After the harvest season ends, it’s time to make some offerings at the rice field and asking for holy water together.)
- Panglahlah + (All felt the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in the economic field.)
- Lalintah + (All rice fields have leeches, meaning there is always something bad in something good.)