He mana'o au iā 'oe, wale 'oe. Heh mah-nah-(short pause)-oh ow yah (short pause)-oy vah-leh (short pause)-oy. I think about you, only you.
The phrase "together as one" in Hawaiian can be expressed as "hoʻokahi me kaʻu."
'Ekahi
If you are talking about the Hawaiian word for the food made from the Tarot root: Ryhmes with boy or toy. One might think that it is pronounced "poe-ee" due to some of the Hawaiian grammar rules, but "poi" contains one of the dipthongs in the language.
Hawaiian is the language that was spoken when the hawaiians lived in Hawaii and before the law 100 years ago that made speaking hawaiian illegal so the hawaiians created a newspaper and taught themselve to write as well as read. the news papers were in hawaiian which allowed them to converse without being arrested and no one else knew the language so theyy could talk crap if they wanted. HAwaiian was also able to be spoken only in the homes and was taught to the children. after it was re-legalized to speak hawaiian, the language had already diminished but was taught and kept alive by the hawaiians. It is the language that originated In the state of Hawaii. Hawaiians called the island of Hawaii, Keawe. "Ka moku o Keawe" is "the island of Hawaii" (Kah moh-ku oh kay-ah-ve)
You don't. Miranda is not a word, it's a name, and is the same in any language. Someone who only speaks Hawaiian would probably have difficulty saying it, though, since Hawaiian has no letter for R or D. Milanha is probably pretty close. the hawaiian name for miranda is kalehala or milannka either one will work and it does not matter how the name mirnda is spelled
The phrase "together as one" in Hawaiian can be expressed as "hoʻokahi me kaʻu."
'Ekahi
i don't think no one knows hawaiian... SORRY.
If you are talking about the Hawaiian word for the food made from the Tarot root: Ryhmes with boy or toy. One might think that it is pronounced "poe-ee" due to some of the Hawaiian grammar rules, but "poi" contains one of the dipthongs in the language.
I can think of only one; STRENGTH
Hawaiian is the language that was spoken when the hawaiians lived in Hawaii and before the law 100 years ago that made speaking hawaiian illegal so the hawaiians created a newspaper and taught themselve to write as well as read. the news papers were in hawaiian which allowed them to converse without being arrested and no one else knew the language so theyy could talk crap if they wanted. HAwaiian was also able to be spoken only in the homes and was taught to the children. after it was re-legalized to speak hawaiian, the language had already diminished but was taught and kept alive by the hawaiians. It is the language that originated In the state of Hawaii. Hawaiians called the island of Hawaii, Keawe. "Ka moku o Keawe" is "the island of Hawaii" (Kah moh-ku oh kay-ah-ve)
You don't. Miranda is not a word, it's a name, and is the same in any language. Someone who only speaks Hawaiian would probably have difficulty saying it, though, since Hawaiian has no letter for R or D. Milanha is probably pretty close. the hawaiian name for miranda is kalehala or milannka either one will work and it does not matter how the name mirnda is spelled
Why do you think it should be different from the American one?
only one: hau
It sounds like a bad attempt at someone who didn't know the hawaiian language trying to give someone a Hawaiian name. Technically it means, heavenly number one. 'ekahi being the number 1 and lani being Heavenly. I think someone was trying to say 'heavenly one (not number)' but didn't understand that there was no translation for that in Hawaiian. a Hawaiian would be more inclined to give a name like kamalani which means heavenly child/person.
If you really think about it, sign language and speaking by using our voices [or possibly writing] is the only communications we have with another, to interact with one another.
Ahem. Since Wyoming is in America, its national language is English, same as all other states in the US. Sound good? That's if you disregard the fact that only 30 states have English as the official language and Hawaii has Hawaiian as one official language. Granted, the majority of the population does speak English, for now.