Huli | Search «ole»: He 12 i loaʻa | Found 12.
ole
ole
/ O-LE /1. s., The eye tooth.
2. Name of a kind of fish.
3. A pau na kui eha, a pau na ole eha, a ma ia ao ae o Huna ia la. Ole applies to four days in the month, so called because it was unsafe to go to sea on account of high surf, as the tides would be high.
ole
/ O-LE /1. v., To be not; to cease to exist. 1 Sam. 2:31. To pass away. Iob. 24:24. A e ole loa hoi, and to be no more. Hal. 39:14. Aole e ole. Luk. 21:9. A ua ole ia, and it is gone. Hal. 103:16.
2. To not, or not to do a thing, with an infinitive. Rom. 8:32.
3. Hoole. To deny; refuse; make void; abrogate.
4. To answer, or plead not guilty to a charge.
5. To refuse; forbid; rebuke. NOTE.— Ole often has the form of a verb, when it serves only to express negation.
ole
/ O-LE /1. s., Nothingness; vanity; in vain. Oihk. 26:20. Aole ka ole, without fail; the not; the negative; ka ole, no existence. Ezek. 12:19.
2. The want; the lack; the destitution of a thing; make ia no ka ole o ka ai, he died for the not (want) of food. Iob. 4:11.
3. Hoole. A denial; a want of truth; inability; nothingness.
ole
/ O-LE /adv., A negative; no; not; nor; a particle of deprivation like un and less in English. See aole. Aole is used before a noun or verb, and ole after it.
ole
/ O-LE /v., To speak through the throat or through a trumpet.
ole
/ O-LE /1. s., A speaking-trumpet.
2. A kind of large sea shell.
ole
/ o'-le /adv., A word used in denial; no, not, same as aole. (Aole is used before a noun or verb, and ole after it.)
ole
/ o'-le /1. n., The eye tooth.
2. n., Deficiency; failure; want; lack: Make ia no ka ole o ka ai, he died for lack of food.
ole
/ o-lē' /1. n., A speaking-trumpet.
2. n., A conch shell.
ole
/ o'-le /1. v., To be nothing; to cease to exist; to pass away: a e ole loa hoi, and to be no more; aole e ole; a ua ole ia, and it is gone.
2. v., Not to do a thing. Used with an infinitive.
ole
/ o-lē' /v., To speak through the throat or through a trumpet.
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