ʻʻ

Inoa | Name(s)

ʻʻ

Hōʻuluʻulu manaʻo

He akua kāne ʻo ʻʻ. He keiki ʻo ia na ūʻܱ첹 lāua ʻo Hinapukuiʻa. Ua noho ʻo ia me kona mau mākua ma ʻAleamai ma loko o ka moku o Բ ma Maui mokupuni. He akua ʻo ʻʻ no ka lawaiʻa ʻana. ʻO kekahi o kāna mau hana kaulana ʻo ia hoʻi ka hana ʻupena, a me ke kūkulu ʻana i mau koʻa a i mau kūʻula a puni nā mokupuni o Hawaiʻi. 

Description

ʻʻ is a deity of Hawaiʻi. He is the child of ūʻܱ첹 and Hinapukuiʻa. He lived with his parents in ʻAleamai within the moku of Բ on Maui island. ʻʻ is a god of fishing. Some of his famous deeds include making nets and building fishing stations and fishing shrines around the islands of Hawaiʻi.

ʻŌlelo kuhikuhi

E koho i kēia huaʻōlelo no nā kumuwaiwai pili iā ʻʻ, ke akua pili i nā loko iʻa.

Instructions

Use this term for resources related to ʻʻ the god associated with fishponds.

Moʻokūʻauhau | Genealogy

Makua | Parent: ūʻܱ첹1; Hinapukuiʻa

ʻĀina | Land/sea: Aleamai2; Բ

Hana | Practice: ɲʻ2; Hana ʻupena; ūkulu koʻa

ūmole | Source(s)

1. Pukui, Mary Kawena, and Samuel H. (Samuel Hoyt) Elbert. Hawaiian Dictionary : Hawaiian-English, English-Hawaiian. Rev. and enl. Ed. Honolulu: Ӱҵ Press, 1986.

2. Alameida, Roy, and Betty Dunford. Nā Moʻolelo Hawaiʻi o Ka Wā Kahiko = Stories of Old Hawaiʻi. Honolulu, Hawaiʻi: Bess Press, 1997. pages 45-49.

Hoʻopili ʻia i |Applied to: , ,

Mea haku | Created by: Puaokamele Dizon

Mea loiloi | Edited by: Annemarie Paikai