Inoa | Name(s)
ī貹ܱ
Hiʻona ʻāina | Land characteristic: Moku
Hiʻona ʻāina o loko o kēia wahi | Feature(s) located within this place: Alae Iki; Alae Nui; Kaʻāpahu; Kukuiʻula; Kukuiʻulaiki; Kīkoʻo; Puaʻaluʻu
Hiʻona ʻāina nona kēia wahi | Feature(s) that contain this place: Maui
Hōʻuluʻulu manaʻo
He moku kēia ma ka mokupuni o Maui, ma kahi hema iki o Բ a ma ka ʻaoʻao aʻe, aia ka moku o ܱō. Kaulana o ī貹ܱ i ka makani, ʻo ia hoʻi “Ka makani kāʻili aloha o ī貹ܱ.”
Description
Forest reserve, quadrangle, village, district, and valley, East Maui; home of Laka (UL 43), a god worshipped by canoe makers. Lit., fetch [from] exhausted gardens (kī is short for kiʻi). (Place Names of Hawaiʻi)
ʻŌlelo kuhikuhi
E koho iā “ī貹ܱ” no ka moku o kēia inoa ma ka mokupuni o Maui.
Instructions
Use for the moku called ī貹ܱ on Maui.
Moʻokūʻauhau | Genealogy
Akua | Deity: Lakaawahieloa; Kaiʻanuilālāwalu
Kanaka | Person: Kalokuokamaile
Hana | Practice: ɲʻ; Heʻe Nalu; Ѳʻ
Kūmole | Source(s)
Pukui, Mary Kawena. ’Olelo No’eau : Hawaiian Proverbs & Poetical Sayings. Honolulu, Hawai’i: Bishop Museum Press, 1983.
Sterling, Elspeth P. Sites of Maui. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press, 1998.
Hoʻopili ʻia i | Applied to: , , , ,
Mea haku | Created by: Na ka hui ʻimi naʻauao o Ka Wai Hāpai