Wehewehe Wikiwiki Hawaiian language dictionaries

vs. Having no wife, children, or relatives (name derived from a lone mulberry tree growing in a cave at Kūloli, Kona, Hawaiʻi, which was known as ka wauke kū kahi a Kūloli, the lone mulberry tree of Kūloli); also said of any very young wauke plant.

s. Name of a species of wauki on Hawaii at Palilua.

2. A person who has no wife nor children is called kuloli.

Kuloli (kū'-lō'-li), n.

/ kū'-lō'-li / Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

1. Name of a variety of wauke (mulberry) on the island of Hawaii at Palilua.

2. A person who has no wife nor children; one without a relative.

Kuloli (ku'-lo-li'):

/ ku'-lo-li' / Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

one without wife or child. Elevation, Hamakualoa, Maui.

Kūloli

WahiLocation, Place Names of Hawaiʻi (1974),

Elevation between Ka-unu-o-Hua and Pēpē-ʻōpae, Ka-malō qd., inland central Molokaʻi. Lit., having no wife, children, or relatives. See PE, kūloli.

Single mulberry tree that once grew in a cave at Kūloli, Hawaiʻi. (PE.) Species of wauke at Palilua, Hawaiʻi. (A.)

Person who has no wife or children is called kūloli, a name derived from a lone mulberry shrub or small tree, wauke, growing in a cave at Kūloli, Kona, Hawaiʻi. (PE.) A wauke at Palilua, Hawaiʻi. (CMH.)

A person who has no wife nor children; one without a relative (AP).

E huli iā “kūloli” ma Ulukau.

Search for “kūloli” on Ulukau.

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