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Mmẹkụwátá
NkówáBanaue Batad.jpg
English: While many people explore this famed landscape from the town of Banaue, the Banaue Rice Terraces cluster here isn’t technically part of the Rice Terraces of the Philippine Cordilleras UNESCO World Heritage site.
í-kpó-áhà – Ị ga-enyerịrị ugo kwesịrị ekwesị, nye njikọ na ikikere ahụ, ma gosikwa ma emere mgbanwe. Ị nwere ike ime ya n'ụzọ ezi uche ọ bụla, mana ọ bụghị n'ụzọ ọ bụla na-egosi na onye nyere ikikere kwadoro gị maọbụ ojiji gị.
gbásàa kà – Ọ bụrụ na ị tụgharịgharịa, gbanwee, ma ọ bụ wulite n'elu ihe ahụ, ị ga-ekesa ndenye gị n'okpuru otu ma ọ bụ ikike dakọtara dị ka nke mbụ.
Tinye nkọwa otu ahịrị ihe faịlụ a na-anochi anya ya.
Ifugao Rice Terraces were carved into the hillsides of Ifugao Province by hand some 2,000 years ago, and are fed by an elaborate irrigation system that captures water from the forests above.