haʻa-
pākuʻina kaumua | prefixA prefix similar in meaning to the causative/simulative hoʻo-.
- References:
- Gram. 6.3.1.
- PPN faka-.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
A prefix similar in meaning to the causative/simulative hoʻo-.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
Same as hame #1, native trees.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
1. nvs., Low; dwarf; man or animal of short stature.
2. n., A dance with bent knees; dancing (1 Sam. 18.6); called hula after mid 1800s.
3. n., A short variety of banana.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
v., To dance; connected among Hawaiians with singing. 1 Sam. 18:6. As an act of worship formerly among the Jews. 2 Sam. 6:14.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
s., A dance; a dancing, as in idolatrous worship. Puk. 32:19.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
s., Name of a shrub or tree.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
adj., Short; low; humble; generally doubled, haahaa, which see; ohi kukui o kanuukea ka haa.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
is often used in some words for the causative prefix instead of hoo; oftener found in the Tahitian dialect.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
1. n., A dance; a dancing.
2. n., A dwarf; man or animal below ordinary height.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
v., To dance by bending the knees, as in certain dances.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
prefix, Is used in some words for the causative prefix instead of hoo as in haakohi. It is oftener found in the Tahitian dialect.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
1. n., A tree (Antidesma platyphyllum) native chiefly of Malaysia and extending into Polynesia, growing from 20 to 30 feet high, called also hame and mehame. It furnishes a dye of a gray color.
2. n., The dye produced from the haa.
Papa helu loli | Wehewehe Wikiwiki update log
Dance with knees bent. (PE.)
To dance, here connected by Hawaiians with singing. (A.) A dance with knees bent. (PE; 1 Sam. 18:6.)
Two native species of Antidesma. (NEAL 500.) See Plants: Uses.
Two native species of hame (Antidesma) bear much fruit. Hawaiians used the hard, brown wood for anvils on which to scrape olonā fiber. Berries were used to color kapa red. The wood is very resistant to shipworms, the best according to Dr. C. H. Edmondson. (NEAL 500.)
causative prefix
the Hawaiian dance; dwarf
No nā lepili | Regarding tags: Pili piha a pili hapa paha kēia mau lepe i nā hua o luna aʻe nei. | Tags may apply to all or only some of the tagged entries.
E huli iā “haʻa-” ma Ulukau.
Search for “haʻa-” on Ulukau.