The heroine Tjut Meutia (“choot MOOT-yah”) used one of these objects shaped like the Basmala. Empus (“um-POO’s”) can laminate these objects with an undulating dapur in over 100 pamor patterns. The clown Semar owns a “magic” kind of these objects similar to a cursed one that Gandring made for Ken Arok. These objects name “broken” and “victory” batik motifs reserved for noble sarongs in Solo. King Willem-Alexander returned an asymmetric gold one owned by Prince Diponegoro. The UMNO (“UM-no”) wields these objects as a symbol of Malay supremacy. The Katipunan (“kah-tee-POO-nan”) held blindfolded initiations with these objects, which include flippable balisongs that rotate around the tang. Rangda casts a spell so men poison themselves with these objects, but Barong protects them, in a Balinese dance. For 10 points, what objects include the Indonesian kris and the Filipino bolo and “butterfly”? ■END■
ANSWER: knives [or knife; accept daggers, swords, switchblades, machetes, pocketknife, sheaths, scabbards, or hilts; accept keris, kris, balisong, or bolo until each is read; accept itak, tabak, sundang, sanduko, binangon, cuchillos, kutsilyo, gulok, wilah, warangka, hulu, parang rusak, parang menang, or rencong; prompt on weapons or arms]
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= Average correct buzz position