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A list of all pages that have property "English definition" with value "nature; character; temperament". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 126 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • Tembung  + (music mode (saih) of the pelog scale that is not often used in gong kebyar, approximated by the notes A-B-C-E-F on the piano)
  • Cegur  + (music stroke of a large gong)
  • Kebyar  + (music style of modern Balinese music that features sudden changes in rhythm, embel- lishments and ornamentations, and varied instrumental performances)
  • Dang  + (to be honored or recognized)
  • Dung  + (music: fourth note of the Balinese pentatonic musical scale, symbolized by suku, which looks like the loop of a script y or j)
  • Sunaren  + (music: one of the three modes (saih) of the pelog musical scale)
  • Kelenang-kelenong  + (music: pair of pots used as part of a batel musical group)
  • Batel  + (music: percussion musical group, used to accompany Janger, kung fu exercises, etc.)
  • Nyandetin  + (music: play a corresponding rhythm to a basic rhythm)
  • Bende  + (music: rhythm instrument used in a gong, a small inverted bronze pot that is struck with a stick)
  • Dong  + (music: second note of the Balinese pentatonic musical scale, symbolized by the tedung, a backwards C)
  • Slendro  + (music: sequence of intervals between notes, or tuning, of a musical instrument commonly used for gender wayang)
  • Pelog  + (music: sequence of intervals between notes, or tuning, of a musical instrument commonly used for the five or ten-keyed instruments of the gong kebyar)
  • Deng  + (music: third note of the Balinese pentatonic musical scale, symbolized by taleng, which looks like a lower case n with the right member extending down farther than the left)
  • Panyembrama  + (musical composition that is commonly used to accompany Pendet dance in a temple festival)
  • Puspawresti  + (musical composition that is frequently used to accompany Pendet in a temple ceremony)
  • Riong  + (musical instrument consisting of 12 inverted bronze pots that have knobs protruding from the upper side)
  • Saron  + (musical instrument in which the large bronze keys are mounted on a wooden frame without any bamboo resonators below)
  • Genggong  + (musical instrument like a Jew's harp)
  • Angklung  + (musical instrument made from two bamboo tubes suspendeed in a frame)
  • Trompong  + (dance form in which the dancer plays the trompong in a squatting position while dancing)
  • Rebab  + (musical instrument that resembles a violin, with four strings)
  • Slonding  + (musical instrument with iron keys, generally very ancient and usually considered sacred)
  • Tingklik  + (musical instrument, tuned to slendro, llike a xylophone, with keys made of bamboo tubes, hit with two small mallets)
  • Saih  + (resemble, equivalent, equal)
  • Gambang  + (Apart from bamboo (petung) -keyed instrumeApart from bamboo (petung) -keyed instruments on wooden troughs a gambang ensemble also has bronze instruments (gangsa). The scale (saih) is not necessarily lower than that of the gong. A distinguishing feature of gambang is that it uses a SEVEN-tone scale. The names of the tones are: ding, dong gede, dang gede, deng, dung, dang cenik, dong cenikg gede, deng, dung, dang cenik, dong cenik)
  • Limo  + (musk lime)
  • Sejadah  + (Muslim prayer rug)
  • Nusa  + (virgin tree)
  • Musti  + (length measurement used in traditional Balinese architecture (Asta Kosala Kosali))
  • Pastika  + (must be)
  • Prayascita  + (complex offering made in connection with a ceremony to remove religious impurities)
  • Pastine  + (must do something)
  • Plelenin  + (must replace (something) back with money)
  • Pamelin  + (money for something (e.g. cigarettes)
  • Crawis  + (mustache)
  • Kolok  + (mute: dumb, unable to talk, silent, unable to speak properly)
  • Goloh  + (loose fitting, but can wear)
  • Tiange  + (my)
  • Kenehe  + (my wish)
  • Nirane  + (my: mine, of me)
  • Curik  + (myna bird)
  • Sandi  + (joint, connection, junction)
  • Bangket  + (sauce, yellow kunyit suspension in water poured over meat to remove the "andih" odor before it is cooked or used in ebat)
  • Kadiatmikan  + (mysticism)
  • Garuda  + (mythical figure with wings having the head of a toothed bird and the body of a man, featured in the Mahabharata and Puranas and represented as the vehicle of Wisnu)
  • Simala kama  + (mythical fruit that kills you if you eat it, but also kills you if you do not eat it)
  • Majapahit  + (History or record of past)
  • Maeneman  + (n a bal)
  • Ngebit  + (n school)
  • Kemig  + (nag)
  • Ao  + (yes, (note that nah is different than ao)
  • Kuku  + (nail)
  • Paku  + (Marsh Fern, Diplazium esculentum (PolypodiMarsh Fern, Diplazium esculentum (Polypodiaceae); common fern raised in the wet parts of Bali that is eaten as a vegetable; hanging decoration with edges of a leaf cut diagonally into thin strips which are then looped over each other in horizontal pairs so that they protrude, giving an appearance something like that of a type of fernance something like that of a type of fern)
  • Naka  + (nail)
  • Lekad  + (naïve, unsophisticated, artless, having a simple outlook)
  • Polos  + (to be honest or truthful)
  • Malalung  + (naked)
  • Lalung  + (naked)
  • Lalungin  + (naked; make it naked)
  • Nama  + (name)
  • Wasta  + (name)
  • Wastan  + (name)
  • Adan  + (name)
  • Parab  + (name)
  • Pasengan  + (name)
  • Paseng  + (name)
  • Aran  + (name (AMI/Alus Mider))
  • Nama rupa  + (name and appearance; certain beings have certain names)
  • Panegtegan  + (Wraspati (Thursday) Wage of Watugung, the last week of the Pawukon cycle)
  • Maduwi  + (for confirmation of priest (pedanda, Bujangga Wesnawe, a few pumangkus)
  • Suung  + (quiet place, empty, quiet (temporarily vs. buu permanently because abandoned))
  • Mukur  + (ighest and most elaborate (and most expensive) form of nyekah ceremony that is held after cremation to purify the spirit of a dead person prior to installation in the family temple)
  • Prangbakat  + (week no. 24 of the 30 Pawukon weeks)
  • Watugunung  + (Watugunung was the son of Dewi Sinta, daughter of King Kula Giri, whose sister was Dewi Landep. n this day Watugunung fell (runtuh) from heaven)
  • Buntek  + (short and fat)
  • Matimpuh  + (kneel, kneeling position in which women pray, weight on bent knees, butt on heels)
  • Tektekan  + (windmill that makes this sound when it turns because of a clapper hitting a bungbung)
  • Buu  + (empty and therefore probably dirty)
  • Daksa  + (capable; clever; proficient)
  • Klopok  + (small cardboard box)
  • Mas  + (gold)
  • Kapas  + (wick)
  • Cenikih  + (name of brackish water snake)
  • Matimpugan  + (to throw)
  • Buku  + (section of bamboo culm between two nodes, joint of finger, elbow, or toe, part of something, word in a sentence)
  • Paang  + (a kind of tree (Leguminosae); small thorny bush to medium tree; flower spike is colored violet with a yellow tip; wood is hard and strong and is used for tool hanedles and pegs)
  • Mel  + (rural area)
  • Kartika  + (name of the fourth month of Bali (falls in October))
  • Beji  + (place)
  • Batun bedil  + (rice cake jaja in the form of sticky, ellipsoidal lumps of a dough made by steaming a dough made of tepung baas, gula barak, and kanji, served in a very sweet syrup of gula barak)
  • Gek  + (term of address for girl much younger than oneself)
  • Maparab  + (named)
  • Mapesengan  + (named; called)
  • Adanina  + (named; called)
  • Madan  + (named; is called; be named)
  • Luire  + (namely expressly, in detail; for example; for instance; e.g.; such as)
  • Pupuh  + (meter: poetic meter for kidung poetry. Each meter specifies the number of syllables per stanza as well as the vowel sound of the final syllable. About 20 pupuh are used today)
  • Celedu nginyah  + (naming the layout of the yard land higher than the surrounding yard land, or can be mentioned as yard land located on the top of the hill (based on Balinese institutions); fingernails of the hind toes of rooster's feet that curl upwards.)
  • Tledu nginyah  + (naming the layout of the yard land higher than the surrounding yard land, or can be mentioned as yard land located on the top of the hill (based on Balinese institutions); fingernails of the hind toes of rooster's feet that curl upwards.)
  • Gulak gulik  + (nap)
  • Liglig  + (napless)
  • Tutur  + (narrate, report, relate, tell someone something, relate, narrate, report, give advice)
  • Cupit  + (narrow)
  • Cupek  + (narrow)
  • Jangat  + (narrow part)
  • Kabet  + (narrow, difficult, difficult (in terms of dress))
  • Rupek  + (narrow; not broad; not wide)
  • Sipit  + (narrow; slanted; not wide or round (about the eyes))
  • Mipit  + (narrow; small)
  • Ceking  + (narrowed reduced in width, narrowed down (road))
  • Tenges  + (nasal relating to the nose; snot)
  • Sabo  + (sapodilla)
  • Nasi sela  + (nasi means rice, sela means sweet potato, so nasi sela is rice cooked together with sweet potatoes that are cut into small pieces)
  • Kejem  + (nasty unpleasant)
  • Kumel  + (nasty, having unclean habits)
  • Pelung-pelung  + (Natal blue bell warf clock vine)
  • Bangsa  + (nation; type)
  • Kawit  + (native)
  • Keji beling  + (pink snakeweed Strobilanthes crispa, aka Stachytarpheta mutabilis (Acanthceae), , red porterweed, changeable velvetberry)
  • Magumi  + (native, belonging to a place in particular to a country)
  • Purusa  + (natural elements; man; male)
  • Goni  + (hemp)
  • Nyegara gunung  + (Nyegara Gunung is a Balinese Hindu philosophy that between the sea (segara) and the mountain (gunung) is an inseparable unity. Therefore, every action on the mountain will have an impact on the sea. Vice versa.)
  • Praja  + (people;society)
  • Abah  + (nature; character; temperament)
  • Pestad  + (naughty)
  • Betah  + (naughty)
  • Dangkal  + (naughty)
  • Dengkal  + (naughty)
  • Ngendal  + (naughty)
  • Iat  + (naughty)
  • Kejal  + (naughty)
  • Kaal  + (naughty)
  • Nakal  + (naughty)
  • Nglatir  + (naughty)
  • Kuwal  + (naughty badly behaved, behaving in a manner inconsistent with societal norms, typically as a child)
  • Jail  + (naughty, annoying;)
  • Nglanyig  + (naughty; ignorant)
  • Ngranyig  + (naughty; ignorant)
  • Beler  + (stupid)
  • Nglanyir  + (naughty; wild; wicked)
  • Nelu  + (nausea)
  • Cokeli  + (nautilus, a type of sea shell)
  • Puser  + (navel)
  • Pungsed  + (navel)
  • Aduh  + (oh me!, ouch!)
  • Namping  + (near be near, be at the side of, be close to, put something next to someone or next to something else; accompanied by)
  • Tatas lemah  + (near dawn; moments before dawn)
  • Labak  + (near the horizon)
  • Uler  + (near top of bale pillar, sesaka, above the paduraksa, at which point the cross section of the pillar changes from octagonal to square)
  • Paek  + (near; physically close)
  • Tamped  + (neat (about work result))
  • Pipil  + (neat pile of discreet objects)
  • Rapi  + (neat tidy, arranged in an orderly fashion)
  • Kaplipirang  + (neatly arranged)
  • Maplipir  + (neatly arranged; neatly organized)
  • Mlipir  + (neatly organized)
  • Gampil  + (crab found only in fresh water rivers or in Kali area during rainy season (mbah, embah))
  • Buat  + (necessary for)
  • Sukla  + (sacred)
  • Kanta  + (neck)
  • Cengelan  + (neck)
  • Sandeh  + (feathers on a chicken's back of the neck)
  • Abaong  + (Neck height)
  • Pigek  + (neck movement in Balinese dance)
  • Jangat  + (narrow part)
  • Leleng  + (neck tilted position)
  • Baong  + (neck; collar of shirt)
  • Kakantong  + (necklace with pendant in the form of a little box containing the umbilical cord of a baby that is worn around its neck for a while, the function of which is to ward off attacks of pengeleyakan (evil power))
  • Kalong  + (necklace, an ornament of stones (precious or not) or beads worn around the neck)
  • Dasi  + (necktie, a narrow piece of fabric placed around the neck and tied or knotted in front)
  • Amerta  + (water that causes eternal life)
  • Krongcongan  + (nedium size cow bell)
  • Katunas  + (is needed)
  • Nyaatang  + (activate; work hard; intensified)
  • Nyaratang  + (need be important, eager to do something)
  • Perluanga  + (needed)
  • Jaum  + (truth, truly, yet, all the same, real, proper (Kawi))
  • Merluang  + (needs, for example, the ceremony needs sacrifice)
  • Intaran  + (neem (Azadirachta Indica))
  • Taru intaran  + (The boiled stem skins can be used to cure malaria and dysentery.)
  • Da  + (negative imperative)
  • Lalamena  + (negligent; negligent; not being careful in doing something; not serious about his work)
  • Rundingang  + (negotiate; confer; consult)
  • Ngrunding  + (negotiate; conversing (about something); discuss)
  • Marembug  + (negotiate; discuss)
  • Migumang  + (negotiate; discuss)
  • Ngrembugang  + (negotiate; discuss)
  • Ngrundingang  + (negotiate; discuss; discuss or say something to get approval (agreement))
  • Marunding  + (negotiate; have a discussion)
  • Karundingang  + (negotiated; deliberated; confered)
  • Rundinganga  + (negotiated; discussed (by someone))
  • Rerembugan  + (negotiations; discussion)
  • Pisaga  + (neighbor)
  • Dedamping  + (neighbor)
  • Dusun  + (neighborhood organization in a small village (Desa as compared to Kelurahan))
  • Nyama braya  + (neighbors, friends who may live far away)
  • Gugup  + (nervous)
  • Mulisah  + (nervous; not calm, always feeling worried (about mood); not calm (about sleep); impatient in waiting and so on; anxious)
  • Bembangan  + (nest for a bird on ground (chicken))
  • Sarang  + (nest in cave)
  • Sebun  + (nest of animal or bird above ground)
  • Tala  + (comb of bee or wasp)
  • Wiwitan  + (loops)
  • Cekot  + (hand or forearm)
  • Kolor  + (purse seine, same as selerek)
  • Tepis  + (net for catching birds or bats made of fine Nylon)
  • Pangeragoan  + (net for catching very small shrimp (gerago), conical, about 4 to 5 m. long)
  • Serok  + (net for dipping)
  • Lanco  + (net for small shrimp, about 1 x 1 depa, supported by two bows of bamboo and baited with rotten egg, grated coconut, or telengis)
  • Angkat-angkat  + (small, rectangular 1-man hand net about 1 m. square with about 5 mm. mesh with two handles for catching crabs, imis and shrimp)
  • Pulir  + (net that has been been twisted up by waves, not tangled)
  • Pencar  + (net throwing net, round, with lead weights along periphery, about 2 depa wide, with pull rope attached to center)
  • Sau  + (triangular net that is pushed along the shore)
  • Set  + (netlength of jaring as it is bought from the store)
  • Lateng  + (nettle; plants whose leaves can cause itching on the skin when touched (Laportea interrupta))
  • Bawang  + (short in length, for something not standing)
  • Saungan  + (never has fought (cock))
  • Kedi  + (never menstruate, women who cannot mature)
  • Musbus  + (take off, slip off (means that there is nothing left, all gone)
  • Ulet  + (work very hard)
  • Morong  + (pitcher or jar)
  • Nanging  + (nevertheless)
  • Durusanga  + (nevertheless is continued)
  • Baru  + (new)
  • Keladi tingkih  + (new cocoyam, large perennial herb with vernew cocoyam, large perennial herb with very large, deeply notched, arrow-shaped leaves that arise from a large edible tuber or corm. Superficially similar to keladi, taro, Colocasia esculenta, except for the attachment of leaf stem to leaf, which is peltate for taro and sagittate for keladi tingkih. Large, shallow rhizome or corm to which are attached about 12 smaller cormels, which are the parts harvested for food. These cormels vary in shape from almost spherical to rather oblong and tapering, but seldom more than 10 cm. in longest dimensionldom more than 10 cm. in longest dimension)
  • Sasih  + (lunar month of the Balinese Saka year, numbered from 1 to 12 using Sanskrit names that are the numbers from 1 to 12: Kasa, Karo, Ketiga, Kapat, Kelima, Kenem, Kepitu, Kaulu, Kesanga, Kedasa, Desta, Sada)
  • Sawak  + (new person; unknown person)
  • Sesawakan  + (new person; unknown person; new strangers)
  • Orta  + (news)
  • Kabar  + (news)
  • Ngortain  + (news, give news, mention)
  • Gatra  + (news; plan (AMI/Alus Mider))
  • Koran  + (newspaper)
  • Benjangne  + (next day)
  • Tahunan  + (next year or lasting many years)
  • Salanturne  + (next; so on; after that; then)
  • Alu  + (lizard, Varanus salvator (Varanidae))
  • Among  + (take care of temple, guard, keep watch)
  • Ngaben nangun  + (ngaben ceremony by lifting back the remains (bones) that have been buried or using symbols (human form of sandalwood))
  • Sawa karesian  + (ngaben ceremony by using the symbol of sandalwood or majegau as a substitute for the corpse)
  • Nglungah  + (ngaben ceremony for small children whose bngaben ceremony for small children whose bodies have not been buried in specific locations. Earth from the cemetery is scooped up, put in an adegan, taken for ceremonies to the house compound, and then cremated in a pan, ground up in a sasenden, and put in yellow coconut to be taken to the seat in yellow coconut to be taken to the sea)
  • Sawa prateka  + (ngaben ceremony without a corpse (using symbols))
  • Ngaben  + (to conduct a cremation ceremony; to cremate)
  • Sembung  + ((Asteraceaee / Compositae))
  • Ngalumin  + (Ngalumin: cook half-cooked)
  • Ngamprag  + (Ngamprag: bluff)
  • Nganjekang  + (Nganjekang: Spirit; encourage the fight to win)
  • Ngad  + (sharp edge of cut bamboo)
  • Ngembak  + (open: break through an obstacle, break open an obstacle, as a normally dry stream breaking out into the sea)