I can answer this only from a personal viewpoint: I've known many journalists, teachers and nurses, and only a very few Hawaiian dancers.
Among the teachers I have known, from different perspectives, I've found them disproportionately insular compared to friends, acquainances and professional contacts in any walk of life. Nurses run a close second.
This could be attributed to the fact that I've known more teachers and nurses than journalists or Hawaiian dancers, and having met more, I've seen a greater proportion of all personality types within those groups.
However, comparing teachers and nurses to professions other than those mentioned, I'd certainly have to say my response is based on experience.
Of the four occupations, of course, Hawaiian dancers, like others who study and perform traditional dancing, rarely do so as a full-time job. Some of them might very likely be teachers, nurses and journalists.
"haoli" (how-lee). It means foreigner but is also generally considered somewhat derogatory especially as to Caucasians.
oogalaaaaa boogalaaaaaaaaa! this name in hawaiian is pronounced somewhat the same, it is a sounding of " mayyrissya" and it is closer to the spanish pronounciation
Individual bananas will vary somewhat.
Some of the disadvantages of a sole proprietorship include: 1. Taxation: the profit (assuming the company is making a profit) is considered income to the individual and taxed at the individual's tax rate. 2. Liability: the individual has personal liability for the business. This can be mitigated, somewhat, by insurance coverage but your personal assets may be at risk.
Horoscopes are unable to be made, they are somewhat "adopted" by an individual when he or she is given birth to
yes, in fact, pizza is somewhat considered healthy
The king's ideas are somewhat uncivilized.
It can be. "Moral turpitude" is somewhat of a catch all.
Although the languages sound somewhat similar and are related, they are actually very different. As all languages, they are just colloquial systematic sequences of sounds. The sounds are basically the same in all languages, but mean different things according to the particular language's origin, culture, etc.As far as pronunciation goes, their alphabets are different, and Samoan has a few more sounds than Hawaiian does:Samoan has t where Hawaiian as a kSamoan has a V where Hawaiian has a WBoth Samoan and Hawaiian have an L, but in Samoan, L sometimes sounds like an R.Samoan is missing an HSamoan has these letters that Hawaiian does not have: F, G, and S
Aiea, Hawaii was the short answer given previous to my input. This answer is somewhat right. The name of 'Aiea in the Hawaiian language is a 5 letter word. Its spelling begins with the letter called an 'okina. As strange as it may seem the 'okina, which is represented in writing as an inverted apostrophe, is a full-fledged Hawaiian consonant. You can spell 'Aiea as Aiea without the 'okina, but now it is an Anglicized version of a Hawaiian word and to that extent it is a legitimate spelling, however it is no longer a correctly spelled Hawaiian word. For the purposes of the US Federal Government, they probably exclude the 'okina (and kahako) used in Hawaiian spelling.
Hephaestus is considered very unnattractive to all of the gods and goddessess, and feels somewhat left out.
Overhead is considered a fixed cost, even though it may vary somewhat according to the amount of activity.