Wehewehe Wikiwiki Hawaiian language dictionaries

n., Shark (general name).

  • Figuratively, a passionate lover.
  • Examples:
    • Manō iʻa, ordinary shark.
    • Manō hae, fierce shark or fighter.
    • Manō kanaka, shark thought to be born of a human mother and sired by a shark god, or by a deified person whose spirit possesses a shark or turns into a shark.
    • Manō ihu waʻa, shark traditionally said to rest its head on the outrigger of a canoe, beloved by fishermen and fed; literally, bow shark.
    • Pau pele, pau manō, consumed by volcanic fire, consumed by shark [may I die if I don't keep my pledge].
  • References:

Nā LepiliTags: fauna ʻaumakua fish

Papa helu loliWehewehe Wikiwiki update log

n., Dam, stream or water source, headwaters, place where water is obstructed for distribution in channels, channels (Isa. 8.7).

Nā LepiliTags: geology

Papa helu loliWehewehe Wikiwiki update log

1. num., Many, numerous, four thousand; thick.

  • Examples:
    • He lau ka puʻu, he mano ka ihona (chant), many hills, numerous descents [of troubles].
  • References:

2. vt., To throw, as stone; to aim at and hit.

  • Rare

3. (Cap.) Short for Manokalanipō.

Nā LepiliTags: math aliʻi

Papa helu loliWehewehe Wikiwiki update log

s. The number 4,000; hookahi lau ai, hookahi mano ia, one 400 bunches of food, one 4,000 of fish. Gram.§ 116:5. He umi lau ua like ia me ka mano, 4,000.

s., A shark; he inoa no ka ia ai kanaka. NOTE.— There are many species of shark, besides some other kinds of fish which Hawaiians call by the general name of mano, as the niuhi and the ahi; they were all kapu to women to eat under penalty of death.

Papa helu loliWehewehe Wikiwiki update log

v. To throw; to cast, as a stone; to throw at a thing; e pehi; to pelt.

adj. Thick; multitudinous; many; numerous. See MANOMANO and MANUU.

To throw; to cast, as a stone; to throw at a thing; e pehi; to pelt.

A shark; he inoa no ka ia ai kanaka. (There are many species of shark, besides some other kinds of fish which Hawaiians call by the general name of mano, as the niuhi and the ahi; they were all. tabu to women to eat under penalty of death.)

1. The number 4,000; hookahi lau ai. hookahi mano ia, one 400 bunches of food. one 4,000 of fish. He umi lau ua like ia me ka mano, 4,000. Ten lau equals a mano, 4,000.

2. Artificial head of a stream of water; place where water is assembled for distribution through channels.

Mano (mā'-no), adj.

Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

Thick; multitudinous; many; numerous. Same as manomano and manuu.

Manō

WahiLocation, Place Names of Hawaiʻi (1974),

Ridge in upper Kamana Nui Valley, Moanalua, Oʻahu. A shark man lived in a cave here; both the man and the cave were called Keanaokamanō (the cave of the shark). The man followed bathing parties to the sea and killed them, but he was finally killed. He cultivated kava and yams (uhi). Literally, shark.

Nā LepiliTags: Oʻahu

Papa helu loliWehewehe Wikiwiki update log

General term for sharks.

General name for shark and some other kinds of fish like the ʻahi and niuhi, all kapu to women.

Thick, numerous, many; the number 4,000, a large unit in Hawaiian counting.

The number four thousand or ten lau, four hundred.

4000.

shark.

shark.

head of distributing water channels.

Artificial head of a stream of water; place where water is assembled for distribution through channels (AP).

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Search for “mano” on Ulukau.

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