Wehewehe Wikiwiki Hawaiian language dictionaries

vs. Weary, exhausted. Ua auka au i ka ʻuʻumi (Ier. 6.11), I am weary with holding in.

vs. Out (in games). Eng.. Rare.

n.

1. Bar, as of soap or gold, nugget; ridge or strip between the flutes of a column, facet, fillet, capstan bar, bar across a roadway; stump.

2. Long stems, as of some species of mangoes.

3. Wood woven through sticks in ʻie kala fish trap.

4. Stools, feces.

ʻaʻano Out, in baseball. Ua ʻauka wau iā ia. He put me out. Dic. Cf. hala akula i waho. See hōʻauka.

See entries below. Pakuhi ʻaukā. Bar graph. Pakuhi paʻa ʻaukā. Double bar graph. Papa ʻaukā helu. Ten-strip board, in math.

v. To be wearied; fatigued with doing a thing. Ier. 6:11.

adj. Tired; weary, as of sitting still.

s. A bar, as of soap.

2. A bar of unwrought silver, iron or gold. Ios. 7:21.

3. In architecture, a fillet. Puk. 27:10.

4. A bar of a city gate. 1 Nal. 4:13.

v. A, prep.; of and uka, inland. To belong inland, or up country; auka aku nei ma kona hoi mai nei.

Auka (ău-kā'), adj.

/ ău-kā' / Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

Weary; tired.

auka

/ ă-ŭ'-kă / Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

1. adv., Up to the shore or land; to or as far as the shore or land.

2. adv., Up to the interior of land; as far as inland.

3. adv., Up to or toward the mountain; to or as far as the mountain.

4. adv., [Eng. out.] A word used only in gambling. When one wins he says "Auka!"

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Auka (ău-kā'), n.

/ ău-kā' / Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

1. Exhaustion of strength caused by physical toil; fatigue; weariness.

2. A piece of wood, metal, or other solid material, usually long in proportion to its width and thickness, and frequently forming a barrier or obstruction, as to a passageway; a bar.

3. The narrow ridge or strip between the flutes of a column; a facet; a fillet.

4. A capstan bar; a flat iron strip fastening a hatch.

5. A barrier closing a roadway or entrance, especially the entrance to a town or city, anciently intended as a protection against besiegers.

Auka (ău-kā'), v.

/ ău-kā' / Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

To be wearied; to become fatigued or worn out.

Out, as in baseball.

bar, as of soap, gold, etc.

E huli iā “ʻauka” ma Ulukau.

Search for “ʻauka” on Ulukau.

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