| WMP | ||
| Bontok | ʔi-dapə́t | to place objects side by side, so that they are touching; to have the edges of two objects together |
| dapət | to place objects side by side, so that they are touching; to have the edges of two objects together; to meet | |
| Ilokano | dapét | to grapple, seize one another; marry (regional) |
| Tagalog | lapít | nearness, contiguity; proximity; closeness |
| l<um>apít | to approach; to draw near; to come close | |
| ka-lapít | person or place nearby, neighbor; nearby, neighboring | |
| Palauan | ráud | closing |
| mə-ráud | to close (a fishnet) | |
| Tiruray | dafet | to share a single blanket |
| Kadazan Dusun | dampot | to reach |
| Malay | dapet | to be up against, to touch |
| Tontemboan | rapet | attached together, like the toes of birds with paddle-feet |
| Mongondow | dapot | come to or toward; arrive, reach; be fulfilled; bring in contact with, or bump against something; go toward a goal, to lay or set something on something else |
| Tae' | dapeʔ | to reach, be able to touch |
| Buginese | rapeʔ | tightly bound |
| Makassarese | rapaʔ | tightly spaced (as plaiting); joined closely or tightly; bound closely to something; close to the ground |
| Malay (Jakarta) | dapet | to be up against, to touch |
| Old Javanese | a-ḍapət | closely joined, compact, thick (darkness) |
| rapət | (pressed) close together, tight, closed tight | |
| aŋ-rapət | to take up positions (closely) side by side | |
| ḍapət | being close together, closely joined | |
| Javanese | rapet | tightly closed up (as a corked bottle); placed closely together (bricks, boards, woven strips, etc.); closed tightly; keep a secret well |
| CMP | ||
| Lamaholot | dapeʔ | almost in contact; bump up against |
| Rembong | rapet | pinched between two objects |
| Manggarai | rapet | close together, closely spaced |
| Bimanese | rapu | closely spaced; nearby; jammed fast between two objects |
| Ngadha | rapé | cover a roof |