This is in the Tongan language and is essentially "Hello".
Malo e lelei is a greeting as in a "Hi & Hello" in the Tongan language
"Malo elele" means "thank you" in Tongan language.
I think malo means bad but I dont know about soa
the comparrative form of "malo" in Spanish is "más malo"
The masculine plural form of malo is malos
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
Talofa Lava is a greeting that means hello in SAMOAN in Tonga it is Malo Lelei
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.
'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...
"O oe e te lelei" or "E te lelei"
Malo lava or Malo lava le taumafai. Taumafai is trying.