Hawaiian tuna fishes, especially the yellow-fin tuna ( Thunnus albacares), an important fish in the Honolulu market. bristle worm, a hairy sea creature ( Eurythoe complanata). feast given at the completion of a student's first work (as mat, quilt, tapa, net), or of a child's first fish catch one purpose was to ask the gods to grant greater knowledge and skill to the craftsman. The name of a species of long fish swimming near the surface of the water. Varieties are qualified by the terms holowī, mele, and uliuli. any of the needlefishes of the family Belonidae. Name of the net used in catching the opelu and the maomao.Īeʻo₃. a small green fish resembling the hīnālea, used as pani (food or drink taken to finish a medical treatment) for certain diseases of children of the ʻea type.Īei. ʻae limu juice remaining on the pounding board after seaweed (limu) is pounded mixed with salt it is used to flavor sauce for ʻōʻio or other fish ![]() liquid remaining after dregs have settled, as of pia, arrowroot starch.sap wrung from seaweed or leaves of plants such as taro.Name of a species of fish, reddish and striped he ia kokoke like ke ano me ko ka ea. The name ʻaʻawa may be qualified by the terms ʻeʻa, hai ʻeʻa, lelo, ule holu (pliable penis). wrasse fishes, Hawaiian hogfish ( Bodianus bilunulatus), considered ʻaumākua by some. coarse, as wrinkled or blotched skin lean, as fish. of ʻali₁ scarred, marked, grooved depression, groove wattles of a fowl slight depression under the gills of a fish. a fish (no data perhaps a local name for one of the chaetodons). A hook-biting fish the name of a small fish noted for its readiness to bite at a hook. a hook nibbler, said of small fish that nibble away the bait to nibble at a hook.Īakimakau. Hot love was firmly clutched upon Kaʻōnohiokalā. Ua ʻaʻaki paʻa ʻia ke aloha wela i luna o Kaʻōnohiokalā. Ke ʻaʻaki nei ka pō ʻeleʻele all-engulfing utter blackness of night The cleft with the large manini fish, nibbling now at the seaweed. Ka naho manini nui, ke ʻaʻaki nei i ka limu. To close the mouth so tightly that the molars cling, as in lockjaw. to feel pangs, as of love or childbirth.fig., thick, obscure, dark, penetrating.nahu, to bite with the whole mouth, and nau, to chew) of ʻaki₁, to take a nip and let go, snap. peeling off, as the tough skin of such fish as the humuhumu after it has been in the fire.Nā manaʻo ʻaʻai ʻawa kaniʻuhū heartbreaking, sad thoughts ![]() He maʻi ʻaʻai a spreading sore, infection, or cancer The hīnālea fish takes the shrimp readily. eating, spreading, festering, increasing, as a sore ulcerous, cancerous, malignant to eat away, corrode to take bait readily, as fish erosion. ![]() of ʻai₁, to eat, destroy or consume as by fire to erode. Name of a small fish that bites at a hook called also aakimakau.
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