| WMP | ||
| Isneg | me-sibúg | to pour (liquids) on something |
| Bontok | sibúg | to water plants |
| Ifugaw | hibul | a brothy moistener for cooked rice or sweet potatoes; for someone to moisten food such as rice or sweet potatoes with a brothy moistener, either in a spoon or in the mouth |
| hibúg | sprinkling of water | |
| Kankanaey | sibug-án | to water; to irrigate; to besprinkle; to wet; to bedew; to soak |
| Ifugaw (Batad) | hibul | a brothy moistener for cooked rice or sweet potatoes; for someone to moisten food such as rice or sweet potatoes with a brothy moistener, either in a spoon or in the mouth |
| Ibaloy | sibol | to have a simple meal or snack that is composed of only a staple food (as rice, camote, bread) and a drink (as water, broth, coffee) |
| i-sipol | to apply either the drink to the staple, or the staple to the drink | |
| Casiguran Dumagat | sibug-sibug | to splash (of the splashing sound of a person or animal running in water) |
| Ilokano | sibúg | water used for watering plants |
| sibug-an | to water plants; baptize | |
| Malay | sibur | ladling or scooping up; a shallow scoop of coconut shell |
| Minangkabau | simbur | throwing water into the air so that it may fall in drops |
| Balinese | simbuh | powder or liquid blown from the mouth by a healer as medicine; to blow out in this way; spit poison (some snakes) |