Huli | Search «haluku»: He 5 i loaʻa | Found 5.
haluku
vi.
1. To clatter, bang, thud, rattle, plop; to strike the side of the canoe with the paddle.
2. To wallow, as a hog; to render turbid. Ka puaʻa … i kona haluku ʻana i loko o ke kiʻo lepo (2 Pet. 2.22), the pig … to her wallowing in the mire.
3. To crowd, rush; crowded. Haluku ka ʻai a ke aku, the bonito rush to eat.
HA-LU-KU
v. To wallow in the mire, as a hog. 2 Pet. 2:22.
2. To lap water, as a dog; e kope i ka wai me he ilio la.
3. To use the paddle in rowing.
Haluku (hā-lū'-ku), n.
/ hā-lū'-ku /A noise, especially the sound produced by striking the side of a canoe with a paddle, so as to scare fish into a net.
Haluku (hā'-lū'-ku), v.
/ hā'-lū'-ku /1. (Obsolete.) To wallow in the mire, as a hog.
2. To strike the canoe with the paddle; that is, to scare fish into a net.
3. To render turbid or muddy.
haluku
thuds accompanying quarrel or playing in house; bangs on walls
E huli iā “haluku” ma Ulukau.
Search for “haluku” on Ulukau.