Wehewehe Wikiwiki Hawaiian language dictionaries

kākalaioa

/ kā.kalai.oa / Haw to Eng, Pukui-Elbert (1986),

1. vs., Thorny.

  • Examples:
    • Lei kākalaioa, crown of thorns [as worn by Christ].
  • References:
    • Kin. 3.18.

2. n., Gray nickers (Caesalpinia major, misidentified locally as C. crista), a straggly bramble, a pantropical vine indigenous to Hawaiʻi, with thorny branches and leaf stems and with small yellow flowers. Within each large spiny pod are two or three gray marble-like seeds, which are used for leis, also powdered for medicine.

  • References:
    • Neal 433.

3. n., Yellow nickers (Caesalpinia bonduc 🌐), today commonly called Hawaiian pearls, similar to the gray nickers, but with yellowish-gray instead of gray seeds.

Nā LepiliTags: flora

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kakalaioa

kikinonoun / KA-KA-LAI-O-A / Haw to Eng, Andrews (1865),

s., A thorny vine with pods very prickly, seeds globular, very hard, shining; a thorn. Kin. 3:18. Guillandina Bonduc.

Nā LepiliTags: flora

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kakalaioa

ʻaʻanostative verb / KA-KA-LAI-O-A / Haw to Eng, Andrews (1865),

adj., Thorny; composed of thorns.

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kakalaioa

/ KA-KA-LAI-O-A / Haw to Eng, Andrews (1865),

1. v., To stand erect, as the hair; to be stiff; to be sharp pointed.

2. To be angry. See kakala.

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kakalaioa

ʻaʻanostative verb / kă'-kă'-lăi-ō'a / Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

adj., Thorny; composed of thorns.

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kakalaioa

kikinonoun / kă'-kă-lă'i-ō'a / Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

n., A tall spreading shrub (Caesalpinia bonducella), having seeds globose, of stony hardness and lead color.

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kakalaioa

/ kă'-kă'-lăi-ō'a / Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

v., Same as kakalaio, to have a creepy sensation.

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Kākalaioa

iʻoaproper noun WahiLocation, Place Names of Hawaiʻi (1974),

Rock in the sea off Makapuʻu, Oʻahu.

  • Literally, gray nickers (a rough bramble; the rocks here are as sharp as kākalaioa thorns).

Nā LepiliTags: Oʻahu

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Kākalaioa

iʻoaproper noun WahiLocation, Hawaiʻi Place Names (2002),

Rock, Makapuʻu, Oʻahu. Rock in the sea off Makapuʻu.

  • Literally, gray nickers (a rough bramble; the rocks here are as sharp as kākalaioa thorns).

Nā LepiliTags: Oʻahu

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Gray nickers (Caesalpinia major), a large, weedy bramble that climbs. Its name, kākalaioa, means “prickly.” Hawaiians string the seeds in leis, and children play with them as marbles. Powdered seeds supply a strong purgative. (NEAL 433.)

Gray nickers (Caesalpinia major), a large, weedy bramble that climbs and straggles in dry lowlands of Hawaiʻi. The word means prickly. (NEAL 433.) See Plants: Uses.

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