Wondering if this means anything in Binisaya...

Hello.  Some years ago, I heard the following:  "Isa untah".  I never knew what it meant, or what language it was, but it stuck with me.  (And I'm not absolutely sure of the spelling -- "untah" might be "unta".)
Just today (Saturday, October 30, 2010), I happened  to be reading on the Internet about the "Cebuano" language, and came across the fact that "isa", in Cebuano, can mean "one" or "raise".  What I remember of what I heard suggests to me that "isa", in the context of what I heard, meant "one".  But I cannot determine if "Isa untah" (or "Isa unta") might mean anything in Cebuano/Binisaya (or any other closely-related Filipino language, since it seems that what I heard was Filipino, apparently).
If anyone can offer any help, I would greatly appreciate it.
 
Sincerely,
Douglas J. Bender
(Elkhart, Indiana [USA])

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it depends on what he/she's by arthurio dominador
[Ooooops.] by Douglas J. Bender (not verified)
Responses, and translation. by Douglas J. Bender (not verified)
Isa unta! by Sir Rechie (not verified)
Dear Sir Rechie... by Douglas J. Bender (not verified)
another thought by koala (not verified)
Thank you, Genamos.  But by Douglas J. Bender (not verified)
just a thought by koala (not verified)