ハワイ語ノート ーKauhiwailaniー

今打ち込んでいることを記録しよう Nā Kai ʻEwaluとハワイ語文法の基礎という本でノートを作っています。

Hua ʻŌlelo 14

 Mokuna14 Hua ʻŌlelo

 Nā Kikino (ʻŌlelo ) 

ke aupuni

ka hame

ka hua

ka huahonu

ke hua kai

ka hua kupa

ka kuamanu

ka huamoa

ka hua pākā

ka hua palai

ka huaʻai

ke kai

ke kauka

ke kahi

nā kamaliʻi

ke kame

ke kele

ke kele kūawa

ke kele maoli

ke kini

 

ke keona

ke kokoleka

ke koneko

ke kupa

ke kino

ka malasada

ke mele

ka mōʻī

ka moʻolelo

ka pahi ʻumiʻumi

ka palaoa linalina

ka palaoa palai

ka pipi kini

ka pēkona

ke pola kope

ka pono ʻai

ka pūpū

ka puaʻa hame

ka puaʻa kini

ka puʻu

ka puʻuhanu

ka puʻumoni

ka waiū

ka waiūpaka

ka ʻaina kakahiaka

ke ʻakaʻakai

ke ʻakaʻakai lau

ke ʻakaʻakai maka

ke ʻakaʻakai poepoe

ka ʻāina hānau

ka ʻehakō

ka ʻokika

ka ʻōpala

ka ʻumiʻumi

 

 Nā Kikino  ( in English and 日本語 )

goverment, country

ham, similar foods eaten as iʻa at breakfast

1.egg, fruit, tuber (as of sweet potato, taro); 2. result 

clarification as egg of a turtle

Hawaiian egg soup eaten when sick

boiled egg

clarification as egg of a bird

chicken egg

scrambled eggs

fried egg

clarification as fruit of atree, bush

sauce, gravy, liquid of soup 

doctor

comb

children

clarification as jam with fruit pieces and seeds in it, also ke kele kama

jelly and jam,

guva jelly

clarification as actual clear jelly

can

leftovers (a common Hawaiian breakfast)

chocolate

donut, also used for pastries

soup

body

Portuguese style donut eaten by Hawaiians

1. song, chant, instrumental composition; 2. the words of a chant

king, queen

story

razor

Hawaiian pancake

haole style pancakes

canned corned beef

bacon

coffee cup

utencils for eating (fork,spoon, chopsticks)

food with drinks

clarification as pork "ham"

spam

1.throat (associated with thirst); 2. stomach of a fish

the trachea

the esophagus

milk

butter

breakfast

onion

leaf onion, green onion, shallots

raw onion

round onion

birthplace

dove (small variety that is fairly tame)

orchid

rubbish

beard, mustache

Nā Hamani (ʻŌlelo ) 

ke oli

ka haku

ka hāpala

ka hīmeni

ka honi

ka hōʻoio

ka hoʻokano

ke kahi

ke kui

ke kupa

ke kupa kope

ka mahaʻoi

ke mele

ka ninini

ka palai

ka palaki

ka pāʻia

ka pāʻina kakahiaka

Nā Hamani ( in English and 日本語 )

to chant a mele in a traditional Hawaiian way

1. to compose (a song); 2.weave (a lei)

to spread with something flat as in buttering with a knife, or spreading plaster

to sing a song, especially in contrast to performing it in the oli style

1.to smell; 2.kiss

to show off something towards others, display oneʻs talents in something immodestly towards others

to treat something or someone as beneath one; haughty, proud, conceited, stuck up

to comb, shave, smooth out

to string (a lei)

to boil something

to make coffee

to stick your nose where it does not belong, pry into other peopleʻs business

to perform music, either

orally or instrumentally

to pour

to fry something

to brush

1.to eat a meal; to party

to eat breakfast

Nā Hehele (ʻŌlelo )

ka lāpuʻu

Nā Hehele ( in English and 日本語 )

to assume a contorted position on the ground as does a worm

Nā ʻAʻano (ʻŌlelo )

ka hanini

ke kapakahi

ke kaumaha

ke kena

ke kenakena

ka lawa

ka linanina

ka maka

ka maloʻo

ka māʻona

ka nuha

ka paʻa

ka pulu

ka pūʻiwa

ka ʻeha

ka ʻehu

Nā ʻAʻano ( in English and 日本語 )

to be spilled

crooked, imbalanced

1.heavy, weighty; 2.sad

to have had enough to drink

to be too sweet

enough

to have a gummy texture as of kūlolo, palaoa linalina, mōchī

dead

dry, arid

to have had enough to eat, satiated

donʻt want to talk, sulky

firm, secure, stuck

wet

surprised, shocked, startled

sore, painful, be hurt

reddish color (of the hair of some Hawaiians)

Nā Hune

Nā ʻAmi  (ʻŌlelo )

na        ʻami nonoʻa nui kinoʻā

Nā ʻAmi  ( in English and 日本語 )

for