Also Itawisara-biyoŋ-en ‘bumblebee’, Ifugawbabayoŋ ‘thick black bees’ (Lambrecht 1978), ‘bumblebee’ (McFarland 1977), Ilokanoalim-bu-buyog ‘bumblebee’. Although the free morpheme buyuŋ must be abstracted from longer, partially unrelated forms in every case cited here, there is no reason to doubt the cognation of the inferred free morpheme. All of the forms cited except Proto-Sangiric *boyoŋ-boyoŋ appear to contain some variant of the *qali, *kali- prefix, often attached to the names of creepy-crawly creatures that are not normally considered pests or parasites (e.g. lice, intestinal worms), or associated with the house (e.g. houseflies, mosquitoes).