If you are also a girl, kaikaina is a younger sister, kaikua'ana is an older sister. If you area boy, kaikuahine is your sister. CLARIFICATION Kaikuaana & kaikaina can only be used for females when they're referring to their older sibling or younger sibling of the same sex. Kaikuahine is used only for a boy or reference of/from a boy. For example, I'm a guy, and I have a sister, so I have 1 kaikuahine. I have 2 older brothers and 3 younger brothers, so I have 2 kaikuaana and 3 kaikaina. For us brothers, we have only 1 kaikuahine and the number of kaikuaana and kaikaina varies depending on which brother is referring to which brother.
To say "crazy woman" in Hawaiian, you can say "wahine pilikia."
wahine = woman/female kaikamahine = girl
Wahine (Wa He Ne)
Kane (KAH-neh). And woman is wahine (vah-HE-nee)
You can say "I am Hawaiian" in Hawaiian as "ʻO wau he Hawaiʻi."
Michelle in Hawaiian is Mikala.
I love my wife, my woman= Aloha au iā ku'u wāhine. I love her= Aloha wau iā 'oia.
In Hawaiian, you say "bracelet" as "hulikoa."
How do you say hello to a man in Hawaiian
One term is "wahine". (wah-HEE-nee)
spirit or ghost = 'uhane
In Hawaiian, a female surfer is referred to as "ka wahine he‘enalu." "Wahine" means woman, and "he‘enalu" means surfing. This phrase captures both the gender and the activity associated with surfing in Hawaiian culture.