asindero
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʔɐsɪnˈdɛɾo/
Noun
asindero
- salt farmer; saltmaker
- (Can we date this quote?) “Asinderos de Miag-ao: Part II - The Art of Farming Budbud Salt”, in Sulu Garden:
- As one becomes more ‘accepted’ into the Asindero community, one finds more traditions in salt farming that are rarely spoken with outsiders. Mrs. Salvacion, age 82 and the oldest of the Asinderos, talked about songs of the Asinderos as they harvest the salt when she was young until transistor radios made them fade from memory.
- 2020, “EXPLORING THE PEDAGOGY AND CULTURAL MANIFESTATIONS OF ASIN TIBUOK”, in International Journal of Education Humanities and Social Science, volume 3, number 2, ISSN 2582-0745:
- AsinTibuok making is a unique process of making salt and is innate to a Boholano asindero and no other process is similar to it anywhere in the world.
Tagalog
Alternative forms
- hasyendero
- asyendero
- hasendero
- asendero
- hasindero
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: a‧sin‧de‧ro
- IPA(key): /ʔasinˈdeɾo/, [ʔɐsɪnˈdeɾo]
Alternative forms
- asin-dero
Etymology 2
From asin (“salt”) + -dero, coined as a pun to the above sense of a hacienda owner to bring pride upon the occupation.[1]
Noun
asindero
- salt farmer; saltmaker
- Synonym: mag-aasin
-
- Ang mga tinawag nating “Asin-dero”,.. ang mag-aasin na siyang kumakayod, naghahakot at nagmi-maintain ng banigan ang dehado dahil sa hindi makatarungang partihan (70/30) pabor sa may-ari ng asinan!
-
- Ako si Dom, ang asindero, at ito ang maalat kong kwento, Pinalaki ako ng aking mga magulang sa tabing-dagat kung saan namana ko ang aming “family business” – pag-aasin.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.