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'aina
{noun} Land, earth.
alelo
{noun} Tongue, language.
aloha
{noun-transitive verb, noun-stative verb} Love, affection,
compassion, mercy, sympathy, pity, kindness, sentiment, grace,
charity; greeting, salutation, regards; sweetheart, lover, loved
one; beloved, loving, kind, compassionate, charitable, lovable; to
love, be fond of; to show kindness, mercy, pity, charity,
affection; to venerate; to remember with affection; to greet, hail.
Greetings! Hello! Good-by! Farewell! Alas!
aloha 'aina
{noun-verb} Love of the land; to nurture and care for the
land.
'a'ole pilikia
{intransitive verb} No problem, no trouble.
halau
{noun} Long house, as for canoes or hula instruction; meeting
house.
hele
{noun-intransitive verb} To go, come, walk; going, moving.
ho'opa'a
{noun-stative verb} Drummer and hula chanter (the memorizer); to
make fast; to bind, attach, hold fast to, keep, catch; to learn,
memorize, master, study, complete, fix; to record, as music..
hula
{noun-transitive verb} 1. A dance characterized by rhythmic body
movements, a hula dancer; to dance the hula. 2. Song or chant used
for the hula; to sing or chant for a hula.
huli
{intransitive verb} To turn, reverse; to curl over, as a breaker;
to change, as an opinion or manner of living.
kai
{noun-stative verb} Sea, sea water; area near the sea, seaside,
lowlands; tide, current in the sea.
kama'aina
{noun-intransitive verb} Native-born, one born in a place, host;
acquainted, familiar. [Commonly referred to a long-time resident of
Hawai'i, as distinguished from a visitor.)
kanaka maoli
{noun} Full-blooded Hawaiian person. [Also refers to an indigenous
person of Hawai'i whose ancestry predates the arrival of Captain
Cook in 1778, such as a Native Hawaiian.]
kapa
{noun} Tapa, as made from the inner bark of various plants.
ki'i pohaku
{noun} Stone carving, petroglyph.
kokua
{noun-transitive verb} Help, aid, assistance, relief, assistant,
associate, deputy, helper; co-operation; to help, assist, support,
accommodate.
kumu
{noun} 1. Teacher, tutor. 2. Beginning, source, origin; starting
point. 3. Bottom, base, foundation, basis, main stalk of a tree,
trunk, handle, root; hereditary, fundamental. 4. Reason, cause,
goal, justification, motive, grounds, purpose, object, why.
kupuna
{noun} 1. Grandparent, ancestor, relative or close friend of the
grandparent's generation, grandaunt, granduncle. 2. Starting point,
source; growing.
lahui
{noun-stative verb} Nation, race, tribe, people, nationality;
great company of people; national, racial.
lei
{noun} Garland, wreath; necklace of flowers, leaves, shells,
ivory, feathers, or paper, given as a symbol of affection; beads;
any ornament worn around the head or about the neck; to wear a lei;
crown.
lu'au
{noun} Hawaiian feast, named for the taro tops always served at
one. This is not an ancient name, but goes back at least to 1856,
when so used by the Pacific Commercial Advertiser newspaper;
formerly a feast was pa'ina or 'aha'aina.
mahalo
{noun-transitive verb} 1. Thanks, gratitude; to thank. 2.
Admiration, praise, esteem, regards, respects; to admire, praise,
appreciate.
makai
{noun-stative verb} On the seaside, towards the sea, in the
direction of the sea.
makua
{noun-stative verb} Parent, any relative of the parent's
generation, as uncle, aunt, cousin; progenitor; main stalk of a
plant; adult; full-grown, mature, older, senior.
malama
{noun-transitive verb} To take care of, tend, attend, care for,
preserve, protect, maintain; care, preservation, support, fidelity,
loyalty; caretaker, keeper.
malihini
{noun-stative verb} Stranger, foreigner, newcomer, tourist, guest,
company; one unfamiliar with a place or custom; new, unfamiliar,
unusual, rare, introduced, of foreign origin; for the first
time.
mauka
{noun} Inland, upland, towards the mountain, in the direction of
the uplands.
mele
{noun-transitive verb} Song, anthem, or chant of any kind; poem,
poetry; to sing, chant.
nalu
{noun-transitive verb} Wave, surf; full of waves; to form waves;
wavy, as wood grain.
'ohana
{noun-stative verb} Family, relative, kin group; related.
'olapa
{noun} Dancer, as contrasted with the chanter or ho'opa'a
(memorizer); now, any dance accompanied by chanting and drumming on
a gourd drum.
'olelo
{noun-transitive verb} Language, speech, word, quotation,
statement, utterance, term; to speak, say, state, talk, mention,
quote, converse, tell; oral, verbatim, verbal.
'olelo no'eau
{noun} Proverb, wise saying, poetical saying, traditional
saying.
oli
{noun-transitive verb} Chant that was not danced to, especially
with prolonged phrases chanted in one breath; to chant thus.
'ono
{noun-transitive verb} Delicious, tasty, savory; to relish, crave;
deliciousness, flavor, savor.
pilikia
{noun-intransitive verb} Trouble of any kind, great or small;
problem, nuisance, bother, distress, adversity, affliction,
accident, difficulty, inconvenience, perturbation, tragedy, lack;
in trouble, troubled, bothered, cramped, crowded. See 'a'ole
pilikia.
pule
{noun-transitive verb} Prayer, incantation, blessing, grace; to
pray, worship, ask a blessing.
'ukulele
{noun} A four-stringed instrument shaped similar to a very small
guitar. [Literally defined as "leaping flea"; probably derived from
the Hawaiian nickname of Edward Purvis, who was small and quick and
who popularized this instrument brought to Hawai'i by the
Portuguese in 1879.]
wai
{noun-stative verb} Water, liquid or liquor or any kind other than
sea water; to flow, like water, fluid.
wikiwiki
{stative verb} Fast, speedy; to hurry, hasten; quick, fast,
swift.
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