You can learn more about the
Hawaiian language here.
Pronunciations
Visitors to
Hawaii are commonly amazed at the long
Hawaiian place names and long strings of
vowels in Hawaiian words. Names such as
Kalanianaole Highway, a stretch of the
Kamehameha Highway, and Aiea, a community
west of Honolulu, leave visitors at a loss
to pronounce them. The pronunciation of
such words, however, is quite easy to
figure out, since every vowel is
pronounced. Just take your time, pronounce
every vowel as you go, and you've got it.
Well.... almost.
It's not quite as simple as that. A
number of the vowels are pronounced
differently than in English. But what helps
a little is the fact that each vowel is
always pronounced the same way. There is no
"o," for example, pronounced one way in a
word like "come," another way in "comrade,"
and another way in "moon" as is the case
with the "o" in the English language. The
prominent differences in pronunciation are
roughly these:
|
a |
Pronounced
"ah"
and
never
"ay."
"Kamehameha,"
for
example,
starts
off
"kah...,"
not
"Kam..."
as in
the
word
"camera." |
|
e |
Pronounced
"ay"
as in
the
long
"a"
in
the
English
language.
"Kamehameha,"
for
example,
is
roughly
pronounced
"kah
may
hah
may
hah." |
|
i |
Pronounced
"ee"
as in
the
long
"e"
in
the
English
language.
"Waikiki,"
for
example,
is
pronounced
"wah
ee
kee
kee."
"Wah"
and
"ee"
are
slurred
to
sound
like
"wye."
Try
it.
Likewise,
"kai,"
as in
"Hawaii
Kai,"
is
pronounced
"kah
ee."
When
slurred,
it
sounds
like
"kye." |
|
o |
Pronounced
"oh,"
never
differently. |
|
u |
Pronounced
"oo"
as in
"goo,"
never
differently. |
|
So can you now pronounce the name of
that community Aiea? "Aiea" is pronounced
"ah ee ay ah." Slur the first two syllables
and you've got it -- roughly "eye ay ah."
"Kapiolani" is pronounced "kah pee oh lah
nee." "Hale" is pronounced "hah lay," not
like the English word "hail."
'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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