Hawaiian	English
aloha	hello / goodbye / love
aloha kakahiaka	good morning
aloha ʻauinalā	good afternoon
aloha ahiahi	good evening
pehea ʻoe?	how are you?
maikaʻi (au)	(I'm) good / fine
mahalo	thank you
mahalo nui loa	thank you very much
ʻae	yes
ʻaʻole	no
e kala mai	excuse me / sorry
ʻoluʻolu	please / pleasant
a hui hou	until we meet again (goodbye)
ʻo wai kou inoa?	what is your name?
ʻo ... koʻu inoa	my name is ...
au / wau	I / me
ʻoe	you (singular)
ʻo ia	he / she
kāua	we two (you and I)
mākou	we (excluding you)
ʻoukou	you (plural)
lākou	they
kanaka	person
kānaka	people
kāne	man / husband
wahine	woman / wife
keiki	child
makuahine	mother
makua kāne	father
kupuna	grandparent / elder
ʻohana	family
hoaaloha	friend
wai	fresh water
kai	sea / saltwater
moana	ocean
ʻāina	land
lani	sky / heaven
lā	sun / day
mahina	moon
hōkū	star
makani	wind
ua	rain
pō	night
pua	flower
pōhaku	rock / stone
kumu	teacher / source / tree
ʻai	to eat / food
iʻa	fish
puaʻa	pig
kalo	taro
poi	poi (pounded taro)
niu	coconut
meaʻai	food
inu	to drink
ʻekahi	one
ʻelua	two
ʻekolu	three
ʻehā	four
ʻelima	five
ʻeono	six
ʻehiku	seven
ʻewalu	eight
ʻeiwa	nine
ʻumi	ten
hele	to go
hele mai	to come
moe	to sleep
ʻike	to see / know
lohe	to hear
ʻōlelo	to speak / language
heluhelu	to read
kākau	to write
hana	to do / make / work
makemake	to want / like
noho	to sit / stay / live
kū	to stand
aʻo	to learn / teach
maikaʻi	good
ʻino	bad
nui	big
liʻiliʻi	small
wela	hot
anuanu	cold
nani	beautiful
wikiwiki	fast / quick
lōʻihi	long / tall
aha?	what?
ʻo wai?	who?
hea?	where? / which?
ʻehia?	how many?
pehea?	how?
no ke aha?	why?
a	and
me	with
akā	but
mauka	toward the mountains
makai	toward the sea
pono	right / balance / proper
mana	spiritual power
kapu	sacred / forbidden
