For someone (actor maN-) to engage in eating, especially a scheduled meal.
mangan
Regular meals are eaten in the morning and night. A noon meal is more casual and irregular. Workers usually carry a pack-lunch, bālun, to eat at noon. Except during inclement weather, lawang, eating is under a house, dola 2. Children sit on a low, one-person bench, dallapong, adults squat on their haunches, halimu''ud. A family usually eats the morning and evening meal together, although children often eat first. During a ritual, the ritualists, mumbā'i, and male members of the family eat first, women and children later. Either rice, hinamal; sweet potato, lu'tu, or some other suitable staple food is required, along with a side dish, such as a vegetable, halawhaw; fish, bilis, bolog, ekan, etc.; meat, dotag, or aquatic food, gīnga, and usually with salt, ahin and/or other condiments. A brothy moistener, hibul, may also be eaten in addition to or, rarely, in place of the side dish.
maN-: mangan
For someone (actor -um-) to eat a staple food (theme -on); see listing under Foods, Appendix 9.
onon; ma'an; uman; inan
Onon tu'u nan lapnay an nihāang ta way i'īlog tu'u an muntāmu.
Let us eat cooked sweet potato so that we will have something to sustain us in working.
Place inflection has two non-past variant forms: paN-an and aN-an.
Hay pangananda/angananda ya hay payaw.
The place they will eat is in the pond field.
-um-: uman; ma-: ma'an; -on: onon; -iɴ-: inan; puɴ- (asp aff): pun'a'an; paN-an: panganan; aN-an: anganan
pangan
For someone (agent muɴ-, -um-; s agent maN-) to feed someone, something (loc ref -on).
pamangan; mamangan
Dayah Lu'mag an panganona nan bābuyda.
There is Lu'mag feeding their pigs.