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This is still an ongoing debated topic.

Polynesians have a name for a mythical land from whence they originated: Avaiki, Savai'i, Havaiki, and Hawaiki.

Based on this, the name Hawai'i, could be argued to have come about as an homage to the fabled land of origin.

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This is still an ongoing debated topic.

Polynesians have a name for a mythical land from whence they originated: Avaiki, Savai'i, Havaiki, and Hawaiki.

Based on this, the name Hawai'i, could be argued to have come about as an homage to the fabled land of origin.

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The word "Hawaii" is most properly spelled "Hawai'i," where the apostrophe (called an 'okina in the Hawaiian language) between the final two i's stands for the glottal stop, which is a consonant in Hawaiian.

Hawaiian as a language is descended from Common Polynesian, spoken about 2000-1500 years ago. The term "Hawai'i" comes from a Common Polynesian root "Havaiki," meaning simply "homeland." It was also sometimes used to refer to the land of the dead or the afterlife in Polynesian religion and mythology.

Cognates of this same word are found in the other Polynesian languages today (Maori, Marquesan "Havaiki," Cook Islands 'Avaiki, Samoan Savai'i, etc.), all

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No one is exactly sure when or how Hawai'i got the name Hawai'i. Historians suggest that the name Hawai'i came from the ancient Polynesians' word for homeland. Hawaiki and Ohwyhee.

"HA", in Hawai`i, is the "breathe of life". There is no real English translation

"WAI" is "fresh water", or "The water of life", or "living waters".

"I" is, for one thing, the concept of a supreme God, or conscienceness.

If you put these all together, Hawai`i, actually pronounced ha-vwy-ee (with the e being completely separate), means.....

God breathed life to the waters. A hui hou.

Originally the Europeans called them the Sandwich Islands.

In Tahiti, it is Ra'iatea, although that name is new; its old name was Havai'i. In the Cook Islands it is 'Avaiki; the Maoris of Aotearoa (New Zealand) have Hawaiki; and in Samoa it is Savai'i. Those are just a few alterations of the name, but there are probably more plus, as I said, the name of the ancient homeland.

View page

No one is exactly sure when or how Hawai'i got the name Hawai'i. Historians suggest that the name Hawai'i came from the ancient Polynesians' word for homeland. Hawaiki and Ohwyhee.

"HA", in Hawai`i, is the "breathe of life". There is no real English translation

"WAI" is "fresh water", or "The water of life", or "living waters".

"I" is, for one thing, the concept of a supreme God, or conscienceness.

If you put these all together, Hawai`i, actually pronounced ha-vwy-ee (with the e being completely separate), means.....

God breathed life to the waters. A hui hou.

Originally the Europeans called them the Sandwich Islands.

In Tahiti, it is Ra'iatea, although that name is new; its old name was Havai'i. In the Cook Islands it is 'Avaiki; the Maoris of Aotearoa (New Zealand) have Hawaiki; and in Samoa it is Savai'i. Those are just a few alterations of the name, but there are probably more plus, as I said, the name of the ancient homeland.

===================

The name is from a Polynesian word meaning "homeland." There have been people in Hawaii for many centuries. The first Englishman to find it was James Cook.

View page

No one is exactly sure when or how Hawai'i got the name Hawai'i. Historians suggest that the name Hawai'i came from the ancient Polynesians' word for homeland. Hawaiki and Ohwyhee.

"HA", in Hawai`i, is the "breath of life". There is no real English translation

"WAI" is "fresh water", or "The water of life", or "living waters".

"I" is, the concept of a supreme God, or consciousnesses.

If you put these all together, Hawai`i, actually pronounced ha-vwy-ee (with the e being completely separate), means.....

God breathed life to the waters. A hui hou.

Originally the Europeans called them the Sandwich Islands.

In Tahiti, it is Ra'iatea, although that name is new; its old name was Havai'i. In the Cook Islands it is 'Avaiki; the Maoris of Aotearoa (New Zealand) have Hawaiki; and in Samoa it is Savai'i. Those are just a few alterations of the name, but there are probably more plus, as I said, the name of the ancient homeland.

===================

The name is from a Polynesian word meaning "homeland." There have been people in Hawaii for many centuries. The first Englishman to find it was James Cook.

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