The custom was sit on mats spread out on the floor, sometimes around the dulang, low table. Chairs and tables were still unknown.
Silid (Sleeping Area)
Sawali partition divides the bulwagan and silid where chestsand woven trunks (tampipi) keep clothes and personal belongings. Some houses have no furnishings except for a few: -papag - built in bed, -dulang - a low table -bangko - bench
Paglutuan or "gilir"
May sometimes be a separate structure where food is being prepared
Dapogan
Consists of table, river stones and a shoe shaped stove (kalan)
Bangahan
Later hispanized into a banguerra, where pots, dishes and other utensils are kept.
Batalan
Porch that opens from paglutuan
Silong
The lower part of the house used as an enclosure for keeping domesticated animals such as swine and fowl and storage for household implements, goods, crops and is some cases as burial grounds for the dead
Kamalig
A separate storehouse on stilts where unhulled rice is kept