kasal 1n Wedding. see: pangasawa; see: asawa 2. 2Wedding feast.
Search results for "Wedding."
li-on v 1To heed an order/custom as groom who must return home after his wedding. Ogli-on; oghondiò [ka nokogtu-on] to inoy rin. The groom heeds the custom/warning; he returns to his mother [following the marriage ceremony]. [In the Ata Manobo culture, it is deemed important that the newly married groom return his soul to his home place.] 2To heed a warning. Ka otow no ogligkat on ka oghondiò to kamot din no nigbottolbottol ka limukon ka nigkutol, warò pad sikandin nigparagas nighipanow diò to kamot din su nigli-on din pad ka limukon. The person who was leaving to go to his field when he was called on with a bad omen by the dove who called, he did not continue to go to his field because he heeded the dove.
tu-un 1v To own. [DB says the word tu-un relates to ogdumoon.] 2deriv n Owner. 3To cause bride and groom to exchange rice at a wedding. Ko du-on otow no og-insò ko kon-u pad nakasal. Ogtabak to Gabi-i pad nokogtu-un. If a person asks when [a couple] was married, someone will respond, they were just married yesterday. Tapus to nokogsungit on ka lukos woy boi, nokogtu-un on no nokog-asawa. After the man and woman have fed each other, they have become a couple, they have married each other. 4v Attend a wedding feast. Tapus to alukuyan, pinogtu-un on. Sikan ka pigbobo-otan on to ogkasal on. After the discussion [of marriage arrangements], the wedding is begun. That is the decision that they get married. 5see: pokog-asawa. 6Own ?? Hari din no tu-un din. His own full younger sibling.