The Austronesian Comparative Dictionary

*hukas loosen, untie, undress; to separate

PWMP hukas loosen, untie, undress; to separate

WMP
Isneg úkas loose, loosened, free from taboo (of objects, formerly tabooed, that may be used again by living beings)
Bontok ʔúkas undo and remove rice from the basket in which it has been packed and tied
Ifugaw úka to unloose, to remove what is covering something
Ibaloy okas to untie, undo, unbind, unclasp something (as a knot)
Ilokano úkas loosen, untie, unbind, unfasten, undo, disentangle, untwine
Hanunóo hukás unloading or dismounting from an animal
Kalamian Tagbanwa ukas remove a cover
Aklanon húkas take off, unstitch
Agutaynen mag-okas to take something off, remove an item such as shoes, a ring; for something to unintentially come off or fall off
Cebuano húkas take clothing off of the top part of the body; expose a secret
Maranao okas cut, trigger
Kadazan Dusun ukas drive away the soul of a dead person on the seventh day after his death
Tausug hukas undress
Malay oŋkas to slip off (as a sarong)
Kayan ukah loosen a knot

PWMP maR-hukas to separate, untie

WMP
Kadazan Dusun mog-ukas drive away the soul of a dead person on the seventh day after his death
Bikol mag-ukás remove or take off the clothes

PWMP hukas-en be separated, untied

WMP
Ilokano ukás-en be loosened, untied, unbound
Kadazan Dusun ukas-on be driven away, of the soul of a dead person on the seventh day after his death
Bikol ukas-on be removed or taken off, of clothes