Wehewehe Wikiwiki Hawaiian language dictionaries

n. Na- form with hae 1–3; wildness; barking; tearing.

hāʻena

/ hā.ʻena / Haw to Eng, Pukui-Elbert (1986),

1. nvs., Red-hot, burning, red.

  • Examples:
    • Hāʻena nā ihu, a red nose (with blood).

2. (Cap.) Place names on Hawaiʻi, Kauaʻi, and Oʻahu.

3. Same as hāʻeʻena.

  • Examples:
    • Ua luʻia e ka manu, hāʻena wale i ka nahele (song), scattered by the birds, shy in the forest.

4. n., Kind of tapa wrapped about images.

  • References:
    • Kam. 64:12.

Nā LepiliTags: color geography Hawaiʻi Oʻahu Kauaʻi tapa

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Haena (hā'-ē'nă):

Haw to Eng, Parker (1922),

sun heat. Land section, Kohala, Hawaii.

Hāʻena

WahiLocation, Place Names of Hawaiʻi (1974),

Land section and village, Kohala qd.; land section and village, Makuʻu qd.; land section, Kaʻū district, Hawaiʻi. Land section, village, heiau, caves, point, and beach park, Hanalei, Kauaʻi. Drive, Mānoa, Honolulu; heiau of Ka-mehameha I at ʻEwa, Oʻahu (RC 173) Lit., red hot. A Lohiʻau-ipo i Hāena lā, ʻenaʻena ke aloha ke hiki mai (UL 249), and Lohiʻau-ipo at Red-hot, hot the love that comes.

Hāʻena

WahiLocation, Hawaiʻi Place Names (2002),

1. Beach park, Hāʻena, Kauaʻi. Calcareous sand beach bordering the wide bay between Mākua Reef to the east and Hauwa Reef to the west, with vegetated sand dunes in the backshore. Across the road from Maniniholo Cave. 2. Point, Hāʻena, Kauaʻi. Wide point inshore of Mākua Reef to the east of Hāʻena Beach Park. Also known as Tunnels. 3. State park (230 acres), Hāʻena, Kauaʻi. Calcareous sand beach between Limahuli Stream and the end of Highway 56. Fronted by shallow reefs and backed by dunes vegetated with ironwood trees. The west end of the park, or Kēʻē Beach, is the start of the 11-mile Kalalau Trail to Kalalau Valley. Several important archaeological sites associated with the hula are located here, including Ke Ahu o Laka, a platform where the hula was performed, and Kauluapaoa Heiau, a temple dedicated to Laka, the deity of the hula. The house on the point belonged to John Allerton and was acquired by the state upon his death in 1986. Lit., red-hot.

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