Malo e lelei is a greeting as in a "Hi & Hello" in the Tongan language
This is in the Tongan language and is essentially "Hello".
The literal translation is "E te suamalie". The meaning really translates to "E te lelei", which is, "You're good".
Ou te alofa ia te Oe, lo'u Ali'i, ma ou te avatuina lo'u leo e ifo atu ai ia te Oe. Lo'u agaga e, fa'amanu.
It is the short e sound
The E has a short E sound, as in gem and then.
This is in the Tongan language and is essentially "Hello".
Malo e lelei.
"Malo e Lelei" can also mean hi or hello
Hello- malo e lelei Goodbye- nofo a (from someone leaving) 'alu a (to someone leaving)
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...
E lelei mea uma.
manuia, manuia tele, ia manuia, ia manuia tele
Mâlô e lelei talavou
"Ia e maua se aso lelei." You could also say, "Ia e maua se aso fiafia." Fiafia is happy, and lelei is good.