same as ʻaʻawa hua kukui, a native tree ( Pittosporum hosmeri and its varieties). To turn the hollow of the hand upward e hooaapu ae i kou poho lima. A thin piece of wood, such as will bend up. Hōʻaʻapu to form a cup of the hollow of the hand to fold a leaf into a cupĪapu. The taro grew until there was only one leaf left. same as ʻao kahi, one remaining leaf (ʻao) on an old taro stalk, said of an old taro about to die.Į hele ke kalo ā ʻaʻao hoʻokahi. A species of tall, wild banana, he maia aao. The covering like a coarse cloth around cocoanut leaves a hookahekahe ma ka aaniu.Īao. clothlike sheath at base of coconut frond.Īaniu. Light thin, as cloth o ka inoa o ka lole lahilahi loa. The cloth-substance around cocoanut leaves a veil thin white cloth o ka mea keokeo e lalahi ana i ka moo, he mea lahilahi a puaweawe whatever is light, thin, as thin cloth. young clothlike sheath at base of coconut frond gauze, as of a veil diaphanous cloth. coconut-leaf or pandanus-leaf bag used for carrying birds. The name first given to cloth by the people of Kauai. clothlike sheath at base of coconut frond European cloth.Īalole. Name of a hard timber more generally alii. He ʻaʻaliʻi au, ʻaʻohe makani e hina ai I am an ʻaʻaliʻi shrub, no wind can push me over. ʻaʻaliʻi kū makani ʻaʻaliʻi standing wind ʻaʻaliʻi kū ma kua ʻaʻaliʻi standing in back Fruit clusters are made into leis with their own leaves or ferns and worn in the hair. native hardwood shrubs or trees ( Dodonaea, all species), 30 cm to 10 m high, more or less sticky at branch tips leaves narrow, 2 to 10 cm long flowers small fruit a yellow, red, or brown papery capsule about 1 cm long and with two to four wings. spelling of aʻa kolo, a root running horizontally that produces roots below and above a rhizome, creeping root. a root running horizontally that produces roots below and above a rhizome, creeping root. wood of the naio, bastard sandalwood.Īʻa kolo, ʻaʻa kolo. same as haupia, coconut and arrowroot pudding.Īaka. as, pau ke kalo i ka hukiia, o ka oha wale no koe, oia ka aae. The young shoots of kalo remaining in the ground after the old is pulled. second or third crop, as of taro taro patch where the taro has been pulled up. clothlike sheath at base of coconut frond vascular bundles in taro corm, chaff, tissue fibrous, stringy. Chaff hulls the outside of seeds or fruit. The outer husk of the cocoanut the skin of the banana, same as paaa. Hence, The name of a coarse kind of cloth, he aa haole. Name of the cloth-like covering near the roots of cocoanut leaves, aa niu. The caul of animals aa maluna o ke eke, the caul above the liver. Aa moni, a purse a scrip a bag to carry provisions in for a journey aole kanaka aa ole, no man without his scrip a bag for weights (of money.) Kanl. Ka ʻaʻa o ke au ma ke akepaʻa the caul of the bile and the liver (Oihk. ʻaʻa maluna o ke ake caul above the liver clothlike sheath at base of coconut frond.The veins or arteries for blood, from their resemblance to the fine roots of trees, aole lakou i ike ke koko maloko o na aa. Kuʻu kaikaina i ke aʻa hoʻokahi my younger sibling of the same wombĪa. Ke koko maloko o nā aʻa blood in the veins Hoʻoaʻa to cause a plant or slip to take root to take root. Aʻa koni throbbing vein or artery, pulse throbbing, as with excitement or passionĪʻa lewalewa aerial roots, as put forth by ʻōhiʻa trees at high altitudes or in damp climates
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