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         Hawaiian Language:     more books (100)
  1. Hawaiian Alphabet (Island Alphabet Books) by Lori Phillips, 2004-03
  2. Ka mahiʻai, ka lawaiʻa a me ka ʻohana =: The farmer, the fisherman and the family : a story written in Hawaiian and English by Jean Greenwell, 1979
  3. Hawaiian phrase book: Na huaolelo a me na olelo kikeke ma ka olelo Beritania, a me ka olelo Hawaii by Artemas Bishop, 1878
  4. A short synopsis of the most essential points in Hawaiian grammar by W. D Alexander, 1908
  5. Instant Hawaiian by Jack Shields Christensen, 1968
  6. Say It in Hawaiian: Na Holoholona (Native Animals) by Maile, Wren, 1997-06
  7. Conversational Hawaiian by Samuel H Elbert, 1961
  8. World Talk Hawaiian
  9. All About Hawaiian (Kolowalu Books) by Albert J. Schutz, 1995-07
  10. Language in Hawai'i and the Pacific (A Custom Edition Prepared Exclusively for the Department of Linguistics, University of Hawai'i, Manoa) by Paul Lassettre, 2005
  11. Important Hawaiian place names by Robert Boom, 1971
  12. Ho'Oponopono: Contemporary Uses of a Hawaiian Problem Solving Process by E. Victoria Shook, 1986-02
  13. Speaking, Relating, and Learning: A Study of Hawaiian Children at Home and at School by Stephen T. Boggs, 1986-01-01
  14. The Kamapua a Literature: The Classical Traditions of the Hawaiian Pig God As a Body of Literature (Monograph Series, No 6) by John Charlot, 1987-09

121. Hawaiian Language Meetup Groups - Meetup.com
See full city list. There aren t any nearby hawaiian language Meetup Groups yet. Be notified when new hawaiian language Meetup Groups start nearby!
http://hawaiian.meetup.com/groups/
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Start
All Hawaiian Language Meetup Groups
United Hawaiian Language Meetup Day
What's this? Add to your site google_hints = "Hawaiian Language";
Welcome!
Meetup.com is home to thousands of local interest groups that meet face-to-face every month. It's easy to join one of our groups of Hawaiian Speakers and Students . Look around to find the perfect group for you Interested in some thing else? Some where else? Explore thousands of other groups worldwide
Hawaiian Language Meetup Groups
Find a Hawaiian Language Meetup near you:
Country USA Canada Great Britain Australia Afghanistan Albania Algeria American Samoa Andorra Angola Anguilla Antarctica Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia-Herzegovina Botswana Brazil Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Cayman Islands Central Africa Chad Chile China Colombia Comoros Congo Congo (Dem. Rep.)

122. Hawaii Links: Traditional And Modern Hawaiian Culture
traditional cultural and modern links with searching. Hula, hawaiian music, ancestry, sovereignty, paddling, postcards, voyaging, language, Hawaii radio, tv, newspapers, weather, movies, tides.
http://www.hawaiianlinks.com/hl/index.htm
Directory and homepage for the Hawaiian community.Traditional and modern cultural links. S end a free Hawaiian internet postcard Hawaiian Music
Hula
halau websites, articles, halau directories, mele lyrics
Ancestry
hawaiian link sites, articles, geneology organizations
Hawaiian History
sites, bibliographies, organizations, book
Sovereignty
link sites, articles, support organizations
Media
Hawaiian radio, Hawai'i tv stations, Hawai'i newspapers
Voyaging

Organizations
Hawaiian directories, mainland organizations
Healing
Lomilomi, herbs, Huna
Paddling
clubs, directories, equipment, news Regularly Updated Sites: MUSIC NahenaheNet
HOKULE'A updates HONOLULU ADVERTISER LOCAL NEWS Surf Report Links sponsor: Hawaiian lei tees Current Hawai'i satellite image Search HawaiianLinks for
About Hawaiian Links Search the web with: Hawaii links, Hawaiian culture, Hawaii directory, Hawaiiana, Hawaiian music, aloha, local links, search hawaii, ohana

123. Hawaiian Bookstore, Hawaiian Dictionary, Hawaiian Books, Hawaiian Cookbooks Theh
New and used hawaiian books, plus maps, cookbooks, hawaiian literature, language, art, music, and history.
http://www.thehawaiianbookstore.com/
E-Mail Us Paperback Plus
605 Linekona Street
Wailuku, HI 96793
Aloha and welcome to The Hawaiian Bookstore. Our store sells both new and used books in all categories, but we specialize in Hawaiiana. Having been in the business for over 10 years in this local community, we have become experts on Hawaiian books. We are pleased to present an excellent collection of na mea Hawaii materials.
We have recently closed our store.
All books are sold.
E-MAIL RESPONSE SAVES YOU VALUABLE TIME

124. Isles Of Hiva: Language
Basic facts about Marquesan from the Polynesian Voyaging Society with comparison to hawaiian vocabulary.
http://pvs.hawaii.org/hivalanguage.html
Isles of Hiva: Language Illustration right: Tatoo Design The Marquesan language has been grouped under the category Proto Central Eastern Polynesian, along with, among others, Hawaiian, Tahitian, Tuamotuan, Rarotongan, and Maori. The people who speak these languages are also physically and culturally related, having migrated into the Pacific from a homeland in Western Polynesia. Some scholars believe that the Marquesan language, or more specifically the dialect of the Southern Marquesan Islands (Hiva Oa, Tahuata, Fatu Hiva), is the closest relative of Hawaiian language (Green 1966); and that this suggests that the first Hawaiians came predominantly from the southern Marquesas (K.P. Emory 1978). While this suggestion is no longer held with certainty, the close relationship between Marquesan and Hawaiian is evident from a comparison of vocabularies: Haw / Marq-So. / Marq-No. / Gloss inoa / inoa / ikoa / name mano / mano / mako / shark moena / moena / moeka / mat one / one / oke / hunger [From "Lexical Diffusion in Polynesia and the Marquesan-Hawaiian Relationship," Samuel H. Elbert, Journal of the Polynesian Society, 91 (4) December 1982, 505.]

125. Www5.WebHostingProvider.Com Default Page
Working to perpetuate hawaiian culture through monthly programs, annual events, and classes for the local community and visitors, including hula kahiko, hula auwana, oli (chant), olelo (language), history and hawaiian craft skills. Program and event information.
http://www.hekula.org/
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You have reached this page for one or more of the following reasons: 1) The domain may be inactive, closed, or out of service. Email us the domain you you tried to reach at (remove the spaces) n o c @ webhostingprovider.com 2) You have a proxy server, firewall, or other configuration problem.
Your IP address is 67.18.104.18 Click on one of the buttons below to download a free new browser.

126. HAWAII At SKRHAK.COM
Are you traveling to Hawaii? Here you can find some pictures and information about hawaiian Islands. English and Czech language options.
http://www.skrhak.com/
Welcome to Hawaii at ... S K R H A K . C O M E-mail ... Czech Enter Here English Choose your language

127. MAUI CULTURE, HISTORY AND HAWAIIAN HERITAGE
Collection of Hawai`irelated links including a Words section containing substantial English-hawaiian, hawaiian-English, phrase and numbers lists.
http://www.mauimapp.com/moolelo.htm
MAUI CULTURE, HISTORY AND HAWAIIAN HERITAGE Canoe Plants of Ancient Hawaii, Maui Historical Society, Maui Nui Papa Kuhikuhi, Kaho`olawe, Hawaiian Sovereignty, Hawaiian Voyaging, Slack Key Guitar, Historian Charlie Maxwell, U.S. Apology, History of Hawaii Overthrow, Hawaiian Language, Words, Expressions, Numbers.
www.mauimapp.com

Maui Island Guide
The Maui Island Guide is a Calendar of Events, Entertainment Guide, Directory of Maui Activities, Businesses, Culture, Community, Government, News, Weather and Travel Resources. This Web site uses frames. If your browser doesn't support frames,
follow this link to frame-free text and image map directories of Maui

128. Words Of Power - Hawaiian Chants And Language
When there is no written language imagine selling property, traveling without any form of identification, or proving who your parents are, all without a
http://www.coffeetimes.com/words.htm
Click Here For Home Fall '98
WORDS OF POWER
by Veronica S. Schweitzer
When there is no written language imagine selling property, traveling without any form of identification, or proving who your parents are, all without a paper trail. Imagine, as happened to a high chief in Hawaii long, long ago, that you flee from your island, end up in a shipwreck, and drift onto foreign shores: You would be considered an enemy and your death would be certain. Fortunately, this particular chief remembered his genealogy chant, and the islanders recognized the names of his ancestors. His lineage traced all the way back to the gods, and so his life was spared.
Nani Lim playing an ipu heke (gourd drum) and chanting on the Big Island of Hawaii The ancient Hawaiian people kept no written records. Other than the petroglyphs they knew no written language. Yet they lived with a sophisticated hierarchical system of land divisions, a complex classification in ranks from commoner to highest chief, and a detailed genealogy. To keep track of this vital knowledge, any transition that might be of importance, either to others or to future generations, had to be memorized and passed on.
The Oli
To aid with memorizing, a system of verses emerged which over the years developed into an ingenious art form. The verses were known as the "oli", chants. They recorded the history of the land and the lineage of the aristocracy. Authentic records, they were used as proof in times that this was needed. The chants were crucial for the continuation of the political, social. economic, and ecological system of the Hawaiian world. After all, ones position in Hawaii depended on ones rank, and ones rank was determined by blood descent. The genealogy was often the only evidence of ones ancestry. It linked a person to all the ancestors, and through this one could show how much sacredness and royal blood had accumulated.

129. Hawaii-word.html
hawaiian vocabulary with Japanese language equivalents.
http://cwaweb.bai.ne.jp/~akko-o/HAWAII/hawaii-word.html
gALOHAh‚âgMAHALOh‚Á‚ÄHAWAI'I‚ɍs‚­‚Æ‚¢‚ë‚ñ‚ȏŠ‚ÅŽ¨‚É‚µ‚Ü‚·‚æ‚ˁB¡Œ»ÝAHAWAI'I‚ÌŒö—pŒê‚͉pŒê‚Å‚·‚ªA ’n–¼‚È‚Ç‚É‚ÍHAWAI'IŒê‚ª‚½‚­‚³‚ñŽg‚í‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚Ü‚·B‚»‚ê‚ÉHawai'ian Music‚Å‚àHAWAI'IŒê‚̉̂ª‚¢‚Á‚Ï‚¢‚Å‚·B HULALI‚́A‚È‚ñ‚¾‚©‰·‚©‚¢‚È‚Á‚ÄŽv‚¢‚Ü‚·B‚»‚ñ‚Ȃ킯‚ŁAHAWAI'IŒê‚ð‚¢‚­‚‚©Ð‰î‚µ‚Ü‚·B MAHALO HAWAI'IŒê‚Í‚T‚‚̕ꉹiaeiouj‚Æ‚W‚‚̎q‰¹ihklmnpw'j‚Ő¬‚è—§‚Á‚Ä‚¢‚Ü‚·B Žq‰¹‚Ì’†‚́u'v‚́u'okinav‚Æ‚¢‚Á‚Ä‹­‚­‹æØ‚é‚悤‚È”­‰¹‚ð‚µ‚Ü‚·B •ê‰¹‚́Aukahak o v‚Æ‚¢‚¤’·‰¹‚ª‚ ‚èA•ê‰¹‚̏ã‚ɁuPv‚ª‚‚«‚Ü‚·Bi‚±‚ÌHP‚Å‚Í
HAWAI'IAN-JAPANESE HAWAI'IANJAPANESE HAWAI'IANJAPANESE aloha ˆ¥ŽA‚ÌŒ¾—tEˆ¤E‘¸ŒhEˆ£‚ê‚Ý hale'aina- ƒŒƒXƒgƒ‰ƒ“EH“° kai- ŠCEŠC… mahalo luau- mauna- ŽR 'ae- ‚Í‚¢E“¯ˆÓiyesj hipahipa- Š£”tI kuahiwi- ‚‚¢‹u 'a'ole- ‚¢‚¢‚¦inoj i'a- h a puna- E kala mai- mahimahi- ƒVƒCƒ‰ hau- áE•XE˜I A hui hou- ‚³‚悤‚È‚çE‚Ü‚½‰ï‚¤“ú‚Ü‚Å 'ahi- h o k u Pehea'oe?- Œ³‹CH aku- ƒJƒcƒI h o k u lele- Mai ka'i- Œ³‹C‚Å‚· k a k u huihui- ¯ÀEŒQ‚êE¬‡‚µ‚½ hau'oli- ‚¤‚ꂵ‚¢EK‚¹‚ȁEhappy k a hala- muliwai- Hau'oli l a h a nau- HappyBirthday 'ama'ama- waikahe- Hau'oli makahiki ho u HappyNewYear o 'ili- ƒJƒƒnƒM wailele- Mele kalikimaka- Merry X'mas he'e- wai- hana hou- ƒAƒ“ƒR[ƒ‹ wana- ƒEƒj makani- 'ono- ula- ˆÉ¨ƒGƒr 'ohu- henoheno- ˆ¤‚炵‚¢E‚©‚í‚¢‚炵‚¢ a nuenue- hoihoi- –Ê”’‚¢E–ù‰õ‚ȁEŠì‚ñ‚¾ ua- ‰J iki- ­‚µE¬Œ^‚Ì pa'akai- hale- 'a'alina- ‘å‚«‚¢E‘¾‚Á‚½ hinu- hale pule- nui- hua- —‘E‰ÊŽÀEŽí ho' a o- 'ehia- ‚¢‚­‚çHE‚Ç‚Ì‚­‚ç‚¢H hua p a k a ƒIƒ€ƒŒƒc honi- kiss kau- ‹Gß hua palaoa- ihoiho- la'a ulu- t hua waina- hoaloha- —F’B kau wela- hua waina malo'o- he'e nalu- ”gæ‚èEƒT[ƒtƒ@[ h a 'ule lau- H ipu 'ai maka-

130. Hawaiian Studies Program At Brigham Young University In Hawai`i
Information on the degree program and curriculum offered under each of the language and culture tracks.
http://www.byuh.edu/academics/sosc/programs/hawaiianstudies.htm

131. Hawaiian A Language Map
hawaiian a language map by kristine k. kershul and lilinoe andrews.
http://www.besspress.com/productdetails.cfm?PC=167

132. VOA News - Educators Bring New Life To An Endangered Polynesian Language
Less than 1 % of the islanders speak hawaiian as a native language but a cultural renaissance is promoting change.
http://www.voanews.com/english/AmericanLife/2005-06-09-voa27.cfm
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Educators Bring New Life to an Endangered Polynesian Language By Rosanne Skirble
Honolulu
09 June 2005
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Wearing a lei and holding another, Hawaiians greet visitors Hawaii is far from Washington: A 12-hour plane to Honolulu across 6 time zones. One is greeted at the airport with the Hawaiian word aloha and a special flower garland called a lei It took a lot longer for the islands' original settlers to get here. Those Polynesian mariners sailed their double-hulled canoes from the South Pacific to these ancient volcanic islands hundreds of years before the Europeans arrived. Hawaiian was strictly an oral language when Captain James Cook landed here in 1778. Subsequent waves of missionaries brought the printing press and wrote down the language.

133. Honolulu Star-Bulletin Hawaii News
Aha Punana Leo, which means language nest, opened hawaiianlanguage immersion Native hawaiian is not the only language of concern to people in Hawaii.
http://starbulletin.com/2001/06/19/news/story3.html
CLICK TO SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS
Tuesday, June 19, 2001
Hawaiian language
makes gains but
still in danger
It is one of thousands of
languages experts say could
die by the end of the century
By B.J. Reyes
breyes@starbulletin.com
It was 1983 when a small group of Hawaiian-speaking educators embarked on an effort to save their native language. Since then the group known as Aha Punana Leo has seen the language make a significant comeback. Today, some 7,000 to 10,000 Hawaiians currently speak their native tongue. That is up from fewer than 1,000 in 1983, said Luahiwa Namahoe, a spokeswoman for Aha Punana Leo. But the group's work is not over, Namahoe said, particularly in light of a report that says half to 90 percent of the world's 6,800 languages could be extinct by the end of the century. "I do know that the state of Hawaii is the only one of the 50 that holds the status of two official languages," Namahoe said. "Unfortunately, there are a lot of people out there with sadder histories than us, sadder realities than us." Languages need more than 100,000 speakers to pass from generation to generation, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, UNESCO.

134. Hawaii's Visitor Guides: Hawaiian Dictionary
Highlyinformative travel site for those planning a Hawaii vacation. Beaches, sightseeing, dining, guides, coupons, maps, facts, hotels, shopping,
http://www.aloha.com/~hvguides/HwnGlossary.html
Hawaii's Best Stuff Hawaii's Finest Travel and Visitor Information Center
Receive Guides

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Hotels

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Hawaiian Glossary
Puke wehewehe 'olelo
I n the first section, click on the words to hear the pronunciation.
C onsonants are pronounced as they are in English, with the exception of W. After I and E, W is usually pronounced like V.
A is usually pronounced like A in ABOVE.
E is usually pronounced like AY in PLAY. I is usually pronounced like EE in SEE. O is usually pronounced like O in GO. U is usually pronounced like OO in BOO. V owels are each pronounced individually when one after the other. For example, ali'i is pronounced AH LEE EE. T he Basics: Aloha A greeting, also used when parting. Both hello and goodbye. Love. Mahalo Thank you. The Islands: O'ahu Maui Kaua'i Hawai'i ... Ni'ihau and Kaho'olawe F or the really adventurous: 'aina The land, earth. eg. Ua mau ke ea o ka 'aina i ka pono. The life of the land is perpetuated in righteousness. (Hawaii's state motto.) 'akahi One. (Especially when counting in a series.)

135. Alohacyberian Of Hawaii - Language Translators -
Foreign language dictionaries and language translators to translate for 150 languages as well as an online thesaurus, an email translator, instant message
http://keith.martin.home.att.net/zwordz.html
Alohacyberian of Hawaii
- Language Translators -
Travels with Keith Martin
Sail to the Homepage Foreign language dictionaries and language translators to translate from any of a number of languages to any of the other many languages and a comprehensive source for 150 languages and their dictionaries. Also find E-Mail translators, chat room and instant messenger translators, Google language tools, a dictionary of computer terms, use the Merrian-Webster Collegiate Dictionary . Subscribe to the unabridged American dictionary and the Oxford English Dictionary and you may also peruse the massive Enclyclopedia Astronautica as well. For Dictionary Resources , you may also click the link to the Definitive Dictionary Directory to find resources for almost any type of dictionary imaginable. Use the Site Menu link at the very bottom of this page to access any of the other webpages on the Alohacyberian website or use the search function to find specific topics and subjects of interest. Translate this Page! Click the link to view a portion of this webpage translated into Arabic, Bulgarian, simple and/or traditional Chinese, Croation, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Farsi (Persian), Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latin, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Tagalog (Filipino), Thai, Turkish and Welsh. If you plan to have this webpage translated into Arabic, be sure to first copy the URL and be prepared to paste it or type the URL into the small box where you'll see "http://" on the right side of the page.

136. Language And Culture - Hawaii - Travel With A Challenge Magazine
Learn about Hawaii s rich cultural mosaic, Hawaii s language, and Hawaii s Polynesian, European and Asian settler history.
http://www.travelwithachallenge.com/Hawaii_Language.htm
This page is part of the Travel with a Challenge website which features richly illustrated articles and advice on family vacations, cultures and countries, cruise and train travel, nature and wildlife holidays suitable for mature travelers. Explore the website via the site navigation menu below to access our acclaimed Guidebook Travel Article Library and
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137. *~*Hawaiin Language*~*
*~*Hawaiin language*~* *~*Hawaiin language*~* *. *~* Basic Terms *~* *Aloha hello, goodbye, love, affection pity *Kai Sea, salt water
http://expage.com/page/hawaiinlang
*~*Hawaiin Language*~*
*~* Basic Terms *~*
Aloha : hello, goodbye, love, affection pity
Kai : Sea, salt water
Momona : fat and sweet tasting
Yoluyolu : comfortable, nice
Nani : pretty, beautiful
Kaikamahime : girl, daughter
Keiki : boy, son
Wela : hot
Pepe : baby
Moyi : queen/king Malie : calm, sunny *~*Want more Hawaiin words Then go check out the Hawaiin Dictionary

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