This is in the Tongan language and is essentially "Hello".
Malo e lelei is a greeting in Tongan.
Malo e lelei is a greeting as in a "Hi & Hello" in the Tongan language
"Malo soa" is a phrase in Malagasy, which is the language spoken in Madagascar. In English, "Malo soa" means "Welcome" or "Hello".
Tonga Is. Malo Hawaii Is. Mahalo
the comparrative form of "malo" in Spanish is "más malo"
In Samoan, you would say "ou te fiafia i a oe" to mean "you're sweet" in English.
Malo e lelei is a greeting as in a "Hi & Hello" in the Tongan language
Malo e lelei.
malo lelei yea that's how you say hi in Tongan, malo means thank you though!
"Malo e Lelei" can also mean hi or hello
it means hello in SAMOAN, in tongan it's MALO LELEI
Hello- malo e lelei Goodbye- nofo a (from someone leaving) 'alu a (to someone leaving)
Talofa Lava is a greeting that means hello in SAMOAN in Tonga it is Malo Lelei
Mālō ē leleiThats mah lo eh leh lay.See also:www.brookvaleps.nsw.edu.au/PROJECTS/Dictionary/Main_Menu.htmlhayllos
Ua e matua'i maoa'e, e te maoa'e.
"O oe e te lelei" or "E te lelei"
'malo' and 'lelei' are two separate words in Samoan....'malo' means "well done"/"good job", or as an informal greeting, "hi"/"howdy"...'lelei' on the other hand means "good"...as opposed to bad...however, in the Tongan language, spoken in the Kingdom of Tonga, another Polynesian island group...the phrase or greeting, "Malo e lelei!" means "Greetings!" or "Hello!".....perhaps that is the original phrase of which the above question is being asked...
Malo lava or Malo lava le taumafai. Taumafai is trying.