bango, a back-basket used for carrying necessities on a journey. It affords a considerable protection against rain.
banting, flint and steel for fire making. Even applied sometimes, though improperly, to modern methods of fire drawing by means of matches. Never applied to fire making by means of sticks or fire syringe.
bayaó, a kind of fancy blanket.
binangwa, anything that has been cut in two; halved. Sometimes used to denote the half of anything.
binawit, a child spouse that lives in the home of his or her parents-in-law.
binokbok, a ceremony performed three days after a burial. The soul of the deceased is brought back to the village and interviewed.
bobod, a tie, a knot.
*bolo, a heavy knife about 14 to 16 inches long, whose shape varies among the different tribes. It serves a multitude of purposes, answering now for an axe, now for a spade or hoe, now for a weapon, now for the ordinary uses of knives.
bubun, the final ceremony of marriage. Its main purpose is to secure offspring for the couple.
budut, one of the principal payments in the Benaue district in the purchase of a rice field.