WMP |
Ilokano |
káwa |
large kettle for making (sugarcane juice) or (sugarcane wine) |
Hanunóo |
káwaʔ |
a large cooking vessel or kettle, especially of trade origin |
Cebuano |
káwaʔ |
a broad, deep pan without a handle used for stewing, made of cast iron |
|
kawaʔ-káwaʔ |
concave depression on the ground roughly having a depth and diameter of a |
Manobo (Western Bukidnon) |
kawaʔ |
a very large frying pan around 18” to 24” in diameter |
Tiruray |
kawaʔ |
a large kettle or vat with no handle |
Tombonuwo |
kawaʔ |
large wok |
Kadazan Dusun |
kavaʔ |
a big wok |
Tausug |
kawaʔ |
a large, round-bottomed cauldron (of different shape and larger than the ) |
Iban |
kawah |
large cooking pan, usually iron |
Malay |
kawah |
vat; cauldron; crater; large boiler, e.g. vat for preparing gambier, or cauldron for boiling rice to feed large numbers of men; natural feature suggesting a cauldron, e.g. the vortex of a whirlpool, an extinct crater or “devil’s punchbowl” |
Ngaju Dayak |
kawah |
large iron cooking pot in which one can cook 15-30 of rice at once |
Sundanese |
kawah |
a large and deep pit; volcanic crater (both of an extinct volcano and an active one); large cooking pan |
|
kawah-an |
have a crater |
Old Javanese |
kawah |
cauldron, cauldron of hell (in which the souls are punished); hell |
Javanese |
kawah |
volcanic crater |
Balinese |
kawah |
hell, where souls are punished for sins before being reborn |
Bikol |
káwaʔ |
cauldron; a large Chinese wok |