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Monthly ʻŌlelo Noʻeau - August

ʻŌlelo Noʻeau are Hawaiian proverbs that often offer wisdom for a person to live by. The theme for this year is Aloha - the Hawaiian term for Love. These monthly posts will show you aloha in action, in the Hawaiian context.

- Aliʻi = Chief, ruler

- Laʻi = Peace, serenity, tranquility, calm

- Haku = Lord, master, creator

- Na = N-Possessive, A-class, meaning "belonging to," "for," "of"

- Aloha = Love


All together:

Peace is a chief, a lord, belonging to love.

Tranquility is a ruler, a lord by love.


Note: If the N-Possessive was used in the O-class here (No instead of Na), it would convey that the lord (haku) originates from love. This is the same reason we say No [place] mai au - I originate/belong to [place]. We don't ask Na hea mai 'oe?, that would sound funny. Because the A-class is used (Na instead of No), there's more of a sense of possession (by "love"). Like when we say Naʻu kela! ("That's mine!"). Na ke aloha, ka haku - It's love's, the lord (i.e. "The lord is love's).

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