Pili Pa'a O Ke Kane Me Ka Wahine means "United in marriage" in Hawaiian.
Mokupuni O wahine
What you have seems to be two Hawaiian phrases, joined together by the word "you." "E pili mau na Pomaika'i ia 'oe" means "May blessings ever be with you." and "Me ka ha`aha`a" means "Humbly yours."
In Hawaiian, "strong bond" is translated as "ka pili momona".
The word for "Blondie girl" in Hawaiian is "Ka wahine maika'i uila".
The term "honey girl" in Hawaiian can be translated as "wahine meli." "Wahine" means woman or girl, while "meli" is the Hawaiian word for honey. Together, they form the term "wahine meli" for honey girl.
Kamāliʻi wahine o ka kai [ka-ma-lee ee O ka k-I]
nā kane o ka kai [nay kane o ka K+I]
yes or no, pili ka na lang
Pretty sure it means "Happy ( is the) Lady (whose heart) is filled to the brim with love"
The Hawaiian word Nawahine comes from two words, na and wahine. Na means the and wahine means girl. So Nawahine can mean the girl, the lady, the woman. etc
keiki o ka aina means a child of the land (Hawai'i). Keiki is child male or female. Keiki kane is a male child and keiki wahine is a female. The phrase usually mean a native born Hawaiian, often extended to third generation born in the Hawaiian Islands.
In Hawaiian, the word for male is "kāne."
Aloha: kane [ka-nay]
kane maika'i 'oe [ka-nay my-ka ee O-A]
What you have seems to be two Hawaiian phrases, joined together by the word "you." "E pili mau na Pomaika'i ia 'oe" means "May blessings ever be with you." and "Me ka ha`aha`a" means "Humbly yours."
Aloha mai from Maui! Most common affectionate term if tutu (derived from kuku-correct Hawai'ian pronunciation) for either grandparent is tutu wahine for grandmother, tutu Kane for grandfather, kupuna for any elder out of respect. Grandchild is mo'opuna. Lots of good on-line searches available. Mahalo for asking!
Aloha: Nani kamāliʻi wahine [na-nee ka-may-lee-ee vwa-hee-nay]