Search by property
From BASAbaliWiki
This page provides a simple browsing interface for finding entities described by a property and a named value. Other available search interfaces include the page property search, and the ask query builder.
List of results
- Nyem + (They realize that that kind of comment always comes when a question is asked to crazy people like I Putu.)
- Ribek + (Towards the harvest period, the barn is still full of rice.)
- Kejitan + (Upward brow movements are done to answer his friend's questions.)
- Acepok +
- Kasur + (What eats once but is full every day? Pillow; mattress.)
- Galeng + (What eats once but is full every day? Pillow; mattress.)
- Panak + (What is it that a child steps on, but its mother leans against? Answer: Jan (Ladder). The steps of a ladder are called panak jan, the children of the ladder. So the ladder itself can be considered to be the mother of the steps.)
- Palit + (What is it that a child steps on, but its mother leans against? Answer: a ladder; this is sort of a pun because the word panak means child and panak jan means step of a ladder.)
- Daging + (What is the contents of this offerings? The filling of this bottle is very full.)
- Daging + (What is the contents of this offerings? The filling of this bottle is very full.)
- Iga-iga + (What is two hundred people, two hundred with their nose pierced ? Answer : house ribs. (kind of balinese riddles))
- Jeg-jeg + (When a rice stalk is full, it bends over; when empty it stands straight up. This is used to refer to a person who talks too much and is empty headed. A wise person has a full head and is bent over like a rice plant with a full head of grain.)
- Gaene + (While she was eating, she thought of reaso … While she was eating, she thought of reasons why she should use less plastic … even though she thought that plastic had many uses, for example, as a bag for carrying shopping and as a container for taking offerings to school when there is a full moon. Furthermore, using plastic makes work easier. No fuss … after you have used it, you just throw it in the trash. She thought about such things all the way through her meal. such things all the way through her meal.)
- Kawigunane + (While she was eating, she thought of reaso … While she was eating, she thought of reasons why she should use less plastic … even though she thought that plastic had many uses, for example, as a bag for carrying shopping and as a container for taking offerings to school when there is a full moon. Furthermore, using plastic makes work easier. No fuss … after you have used it, you just throw it in the trash. She thought about such things all the way through her meal. such things all the way through her meal.)
- Ngaenang + (While she was eating, she thought of reaso … While she was eating, she thought of reasons why she should use less plastic … even though she thought that plastic had many uses, for example, as a bag for carrying shopping and as a container for taking offerings to school when there is a full moon. Furthermore, using plastic makes work easier. No fuss … after you have used it, you just throw it in the trash. She thought about such things all the way through her meal. such things all the way through her meal.)
- Umpamine + (While she was eating, she thought of reaso … While she was eating, she thought of reasons why she should use less plastic … even though she thought that plastic had many uses, for example, as a bag for carrying shopping and as a container for taking offerings to school when there is a full moon. Furthermore, using plastic makes work easier. No fuss … after you have used it, you just throw it in the trash. She thought about such things all the way through her meal. such things all the way through her meal.)
- Bablanjan + (While she was eating, she thought of reaso … While she was eating, she thought of reasons why she should use less plastic … even though she thought that plastic had many uses, for example, as a bag for carrying shopping and as a container for taking offerings to school when there is a full moon. Furthermore, using plastic makes work easier. No fuss … after you have used it, you just throw it in the trash. She thought about such things all the way through her meal. such things all the way through her meal.)
- Elahan + (While she was eating, she thought of reaso … While she was eating, she thought of reasons why she should use less plastic … even though she thought that plastic had many uses, for example, as a bag for carrying shopping and as a container for taking offerings to school when there is a full moon. Furthermore, using plastic makes work easier. No fuss … after you have used it, you just throw it in the trash. She thought about such things all the way through her meal. such things all the way through her meal.)
- Nasine + (While she was eating, she thought of reaso … While she was eating, she thought of reasons why she should use less plastic … even though she thought that plastic had many uses, for example, as a bag for carrying shopping and as a container for taking offerings to school when there is a full moon. Furthermore, using plastic makes work easier. No fuss … after you have used it, you just throw it in the trash. She thought about such things all the way through her meal. such things all the way through her meal.)
- Pikedeh + (With full expectation my request.)
- Misi + (Without much fanfare, he just took a bottle of palm wine and drank it.)
- Puyung + (Yes, it's about time to harvest. If not, the crops will quickly fall by the wayside and will be eaten by the birds.)
- Cereme + (Yesterday I made a jar full of ceremai sweets.)
- Pedel + (mother occupied the pillow in the room until it was flat)
- Cawan + (the cup has been paid, filled (full) with coffee, ... etc.)
- Pura batur + (yesterday, when the full moon, I came to the batur temple with the mother and father batur.)
- Acepok + (What does something that eat once but full every day? (puzzle: the answer is pillow))
- Acepok + (What does something that eat once but full every day? (puzzle: the answer is pillow))
- Malasti + ("Most villages in Bali perform a Melasti ( … "Most villages in Bali perform a Melasti (or also know as Mekiyis) ritual cleansing of their communities anywhere between 4 to 2 days before Nyepi, the day of total silence. But not so far from Ubud, in the area encompassing Blahbatuh, Keramas , and surroundings, this ritual takes place after Nyepi, on the full moon of the tenth month – purnama kedasa – on Saba beach. Melasti involves everyone in the community, and the village deities Susuhunan are brought down too."e deities Susuhunan are brought down too.")
- Kiyap + ((proverb) A sleepy person is handed a pill … (proverb) A sleepy person is handed a pillow.</br>Refers to someone who wants something and then suddenly he is given the thing he wants. For example, a man wants a wife and cannot find one, and then suddenly someone hands a girl to him, or a girl accidentally comes closer to him. Or refers to a woman who wants a man; or to someone who wants, say, a motorbike and then is given one by someone else.ike and then is given one by someone else.)
- Padi + ((proverb) Like the life of rice. When empt … (proverb) Like the life of rice. When empty it stand up. When full it looks down.</br>This implies that a know-it-al person who talks a lot may not actually know much - i.e. have an empty head. But a wise person, who looks down at his feet all of the time, like a mature head of rice, may know a lot , but may say little. However, he is the wiser of the two.ttle. However, he is the wiser of the two.)
- Aduk + (A water pot full of fish mixed with cheap … A water pot full of fish mixed with cheap sere.</br></br>Sere is a fish paste. Cheap fish paste smells bad and, if mixed with a great many fish, can ruin the taste of the whole batch. Thus a little bit of a bad thing can ruin a great deal of a good thing.</br>This is used especially in reference to a person who has only one small bad trait, which spoils his character. It is also used to refer to the bad influence that one person can have on an otherwise good group -a rotten apple in the barrel sort of analogy.otten apple in the barrel sort of analogy.)
- Mataag + (After eating, I belch, indicating that the stomach is full.)
- Nyem + (After they're done, remove them, and then soak them in a basin that is full of tepid water. After that, remove the skin from egg.)
- Angkid + (After they're done, remove them, and then soak them in a basin that is full of cold water. After that, remove the skin from egg.)
- Mem + (After they're done, remove them, and then soak them in a basin that is full of cold water. After that, remove the skin from egg.)
- Kulit + (After they're done, remove them, and then soak them in a basin that is full of cold water. After that, remove the skin from egg.)
- Ngamolihang + (Anyone who can answer this question will get cash from the committee.)
- Kesul-kesul + (As the story goes, in the afternoon preceding a full moon, they say that Men Balu is still in the middle of the forest bobbing up and down in the bushes looking for edible fern.)
- Batuan + (Batuan paintings are remarkably dense with … Batuan paintings are remarkably dense with deeply saturated tones. Their images are often dark and sometimes macabre, but they are always carefully made and carefully balanced. The forms in the paintings swirl and intertwine, they repeat each other and expand outwards until they transform into new shapes and new patterns. They create labyrinths of pulsating light that leave very little room for either the mind or the eye to rest.</br></br>These paintings are characterised by high levels of energy in both form and content. The subject matter is vivid, indeed many of the subjects portrayed seem to have been chosen for their sensational qualities. There are mythical creatures engaged in titanic struggles, there are murders by decapitation, demons attacking women during childbirth, kidnappings, heroic deeds. But even when the artists choose to portray the mundane details of everyday life, the scenes are infused with a kind of super ordinariness, even the routines of life end up looking extraordinary and shimmering with energy.</br></br>The sheer number of objects and situations depicted in Batuan paintings is staggering, almost encyclopaedic in its range. We might identify most easily with the people portrayed, the full cast of characters that could be found in any south Bali village. These people are shown in the contexts they have created for themselves, the built environments of the house compounds and the village temples. They are shown involved in their typical activities, their ritual life, their passions and obsessions. They are shown with the plants they cultivate, the animals they domesticate, and sometimes with the oceans</br>-where they fish.</br></br> The natural world, on the other hand, is shown as an entirely distinct environment with its own laws and qualities. These wild places seem unstable and incomprehensible, only the very brave or very reckless would spend much time there. The spirit world occupies a special place in the Balinese psyche, and there are many portrayals of its subtle complexities. There are countless types of spiritual beings depicted, they appear, disappear, change form and then appear again in another place. They exercise their powers at will and only allow themselves to be marginally affected by human concerns, changing their minds often to become an ally one day, and then an enemy the next.</br></br>And then there are Bali’s visitors, from the earliest travellers in the 1930s to the mass influx of tourists in the present day. The paintings show these visitors belonging to neither the known world of the village nor the unknown world of nature, they arrive from beyond any comprehensible world, like space aliens wandering around in the painting.</br></br>Aesthetically speaking, each painting is made up of countless individual shapes, carefully delineated and discrete, almost as if each shape could be lifted out of the painting like a single piece of a jigsaw puzzle. These individual forms relate to each other in two different ways, they are either repeated as similar shapes creating areas of rhythm, or they are used in opposition to each other creating contrasts and visual tension. Most Batuan paintings contain thousands of these forms either working together or in opposition to create complex fields of pulsating energy, this is what gives them their unique visual sparkle. This same love of multiplicity also gives Batuan paintings a tendency towards baroque over elaboration, the viewer can become tangled up in this mass of jostling forms and be left with only a memory of collected minutiae. But the best paintings don’t get lost in their details, the most successful works focus all of the individual elements towards to a single goal of pictorial unity. Seen from across the room, the hundreds or thousands of forms that make up a Batuan painting create one single unified image, shifting and swaying and held in an uneasy balance.</br></br>In spite of this robust bristling energy, these paintings are not the product of a hot-blooded expressiveness. The artists of Batuan do not lunge at their paper in a creative fury, painting for them is more like playing chess. Paintings are developed step by step in a very calculated manner and rendered meticulously, nothing is blurred, nothing is out of place, and nothing is left to chance. Painting in Batuan is nothing like a bull rampaging through a china shop, it is more a matter of rendering a wild raging bull in fine delicate porcelain. In fact one source of dynamism in these paintings lies precisely in the way such vigorous subjects and forms are so carefully rendered. </br></br>Serialised from the book</br>Inventing Art, The Paintings Of Batuan Bali</br>A book by Bruce Granquists Of Batuan Bali A book by Bruce Granquist)
- Saut + (Don't mind me! That was Made's answer.)
- Segseg + (Eat all of it until your stomach is full!)
- Rembug + (Every full moon day, I took part in a literature discussion at the Jagatnata temple.)
- Mujungang + (Fill my plate (full)!)
- Ejangin + (Fill the pocket firstly, so it will be full. Mang, did you already add money on the daksina offering? Sister, add salt to the vegetables to make it tasty!)
- Nem + (Guna: Every day you work painting prada ( … Guna: Every day you work painting prada (gold paint decoration) ... is that just during certain times?</br>Made: Yes .. these .. six .. these six months are full time. </br>Guna: Oh ... full time ... huh?</br>Made: Sometimes ... in the past ... I would get some time off. (And) would paint houses.</br>Guna: Oh ... you did that?</br>Made: Painting houses. Painting walls. If there was no work painting prada, I would paint houses. I rarely get a rest. would paint houses. I rarely get a rest.)
- Ngaso + (Guna: Every day you work painting prada ( … Guna: Every day you work painting prada (gold paint decoration) ... is that just during certain times?</br>Made: Yes .. these .. six .. these six months are full time. </br>Guna: Oh ... full time ... huh?</br>Made: Sometimes ... in the past ... I would get some time off. (And) would paint houses.</br>Guna: Oh ... you did that?</br>Made: Painting houses. Painting walls. If there was no work painting prada, I would paint houses. I rarely get a rest. would paint houses. I rarely get a rest.)
- Sarahina + (Guna: Every day you work painting prada ( … Guna: Every day you work painting prada (gold paint decoration) ... is that just during certain times?</br>Made: Yes .. these .. six .. these six months are full time. </br>Guna: Oh ... full time ... huh?</br>Made: Sometimes ... in the past ... I would get some time off. (And) would paint houses.</br>Guna: Oh ... you did that?</br>Made: Painting houses. Painting walls. If there was no work painting prada, I would paint houses. I rarely get a rest. would paint houses. I rarely get a rest.)
- Telah + (Guna: Which (activity) generates the most … Guna: Which (activity) generates the most income .... painting with prada (gold paint) or threshing rice (by striking the rice stalks against a wooden board)?</br>Made: For a full day's work, (the income) is greater threshing rice. But the work is hard.</br>Guna: Oh .. I see.</br>Made: I am not strong. So if there is painting with prada, then I'll paint with prada. If there is just a little, then I use less energy. is just a little, then I use less energy.)
- Tembok + (Guna: Every day you work painting prada (g … Guna: Every day you work painting prada (gold paint decoration) ... is that just during certain times? Made: Yes .. these .. six .. these six months are full time. Guna: Oh ... full time ... huh? Made: Sometimes ... in the past ... I would get some time off. (And) would paint houses. Guna: Oh ... you did that? Made: Painting houses. Painting walls. If there was no work painting prada, I would paint houses. I rarely get a rest.I would paint houses. I rarely get a rest.)
- Kapah + (Guna: Every day you work painting prada (g … Guna: Every day you work painting prada (gold paint decoration) ... is that just during certain times? Made: Yes .. these .. six .. these six months are full time. Guna: Oh ... full time ... huh? Made: Sometimes ... in the past ... I would get some time off. (And) would paint houses. Guna: Oh ... you did that? Made: Painting houses. Painting walls. If there was no work painting prada, I would paint houses. I rarely get a rest.I would paint houses. I rarely get a rest.)
- Pepedek + (He asked for a new pillow.)