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