Huli | Search «kōhi»: He 12 i loaʻa | Found 12.
kōhi
1. nvt. To gather, as fruit; to break off neatly, as taro corm from the stalk with a stick or knife; to split, as breadfruit; to dig (For. 4:510); splitter, as stick, stone, knife. Nā wāhine kōhi noni (FS 217), the noni-gathering women [an insult to Pele, perhaps likening her disposition to sour noni fruit]. (PPN tofi.)
2. nvs. Fat, rich, as food; fatness. Nā kōhi kelekele o Kapuʻu-kolu, the rich foods of Ka-puʻu-kolu [Kauaʻi, famous for abundance].
3. vt. To fill or heal, of a wound. Ke kōhi maila ka ʻiʻo, the flesh is beginning to heal.
4. nvt. To hold back, check, restrain: to strain, especially as in childbirth, to travail; to hold or hold back by pressing a person's arm, as in withholding consent, or as in urging someone not to be generous; labor pains, travail. Fig., agony, fear. Cf. haukōhi, kāohi. hoʻo.kōhi Caus/sim.. Also haʻakōhi.
5. vs. Prolonged, as a sound; long. He kōhi ka leo, the sound is long.
KO-HI
v. To dig; to make a hole or cavity in the ground; to dig, as a well. Puk. 7:24. To dig in the ground. Isa. 5:2. SYN. with eli.
2. To take up; to separate, as the kalo from the huli.
3. To prevent; to hinder; to hold back.
4. Haa. To travail in birth; to endure the pains of child-birth. Gal. 4:19.
KO-HI
s. Hoo. The first or commencing pains of child-birth. See HAAKOKOHI. The throes of child-birth pains.
2. A fat piece of pork; a piece of fat.
3. A swinging off or outside.
Kohi (kō'-hi), n.
/ kō'-hi /A piece of fat.
Kohi (kō'-hi), v.
/ kō'-hi /1. To dig; to make a hole in the ground; to dig, as a well. Syn: Eli.
2. To hold back; to check; to restrain, as in restraint of one's forward movement.
3. To separate from or disunite.
kohi
Fat piece of pork.
kohi
To hold back, hinder; fear.
kohi
To dig a hole, as in the ground or for a well. (Puk. 7:24.)
kohi
to dig; check; disunite.
Ko-hi
v. to prevent, hinder, holdback.
Ko-hi
v. to take up.
Ko-hi
v. to dig in the ground.
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