The earliest Hawaiian word lists
William Beresford's List
(1787)
| The British ship Queen Charlotte, under Capt. George Dixon, stopped at Hawaii on the way from the west coast of America to China, in May, 1786, initiating the fur trade on the northwest coast of America. Dixon's account of the voyages, except for the introduction and navigational details in the appendix, was actually written by William Beresford, described in the introduction as 'a person on board the Queen Charlotte, who has been totally unused to literary pursuits, and equally so to a sea-faring life'. Each chapter is in the form of a letter, signed 'W. B.'. Beresford's word list appears as letter 41, dated September 1787, after the ships' return to the Hawaiian Islands. Because they were six weeks too early to head north, they spent the longest time at Kauaʻi — specifically Waimea Bay, where they apparently had more personal contact with the Hawaiians, more leisure, and more time for observation. (The use of t, rather than k, adds strength to the argument that a speaker from Kauaʻi [or Niʻihau] was the informant for the list.) Interestingly, Beresford also went up the Waimea River, following the path that William Anderson had trod nearly a decade earlier. adapted from Albert J. Schütz, "Voices of Eden" pp. 35-36. |
analyzed and annotated by Albert J. Schütz
click on column heading to sort
| num. | list word | modern Hawaiian | list gloss | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Tanie | kāne | a husband | |
| 2. | Whaheene | wahine | a wife or woman | |
| 3. | Madooa tanie | makua kāne | father | |
| 4. | Madooa whaheene | makuahine [makua wahine] | mother | |
| 5. | Titu nanie | kaikunāne | brother | |
| 6. | Titu whaheene | kaikuahine | sister | |
| 7. | Titu | ? kaiku (keiki) | child | |
| 8. | Myre | ? mōʻī | a king | |
| 9. | Aree | aliʻi | a chief | |
| 10. | Towtow | ? kauā | a slave or menial servant | |
| 11. | Tata | ___ | a man or Mr. | |
| 12. | Boa | puaʻa | a hog | |
| 13. | Manu | manu | a fowl | |
| 14. | Ei ha | he iʻa | fish in general | |
| 15. | Wharra | ʻuala | potatoes | |
| 16. | Neehu | niu | cocoa nuts | |
| 17. | To | kō | sugar cane | |
| 18. | Vy | wai | water | |
| 19. | Taro | kalo | a large root so called | |
| 20. | Poe | poi | taro pudding | |
| 21. | Maia | maiʻa | plantains | |
| 22. | Mano | manō | a shark | |
| 23. | Patai | paʻakai | salt | |
| 24. | Oofe, or ooughe | uhi | yams | |
| 25. | Malama | malama ('light') | the sun | |
| 26. | Maheina | mahina | the moon | |
| 27. | Booboo | pūpū ('shell') | a button | |
| 28. | Poreema | pūlima | a number of buttons on a string | |
| 29. | Hou | hao | a nail | |
| 30. | Mattou | makau | a fish-hook | |
| 31. | Araia | ___ | a feather necklace | |
| 32. | Taheidy | kahili | a fan or fly-flap | |
| 33. | Pahou | ___ | a spear | |
| 34. | Tooheihe | ___ | wood | |
| 35. | Ava | ʻawa | an intoxicating root | |
| 36. | Matano | makana | a present | |
| 37. | Avaha | he waʻa | a canoe | |
| 38. | Toa | ? hoe | a paddle | |
| 39. | Tibo | ipu | a gourd or calabash | |
| 40. | Hi dirro | hele (i) lalo | go below | |
| 41. | Tabahou | ka pahu | a pail or bucket | |
| 42. | Taboo | kapu | an interdiction | |
| 43. | Touro | kaula | rope or line of any kind | |
| 44. | Toe | koʻi | a stone in the shape of an adze, a flat piece of iron | |
| 45. | Marow | malo | cloth wore by the men | |
| 46. | Ahou | ʻahu | a piece of cloth wore by the women round the waist | |
| 47. | Enou | ʻino | bad | |
| 48. | Myty | maikaʻi | good, pretty, fine, right | |
| 49. | Areea | alia ('wait') | presently, by and bye | |
| 50. | Pe emy | ? piʻi mai | come here, bring it here | |
| 51. | Mere mere | ___ | shew me | |
| 52. | Arre | hele | get away, march off | |
| 53. | Areuta | hele (i) uka | on shore | |
| 54. | Abbobo | ʻapōpō | to-morrow | |
| 55. | Heeva | ___ | a song in chorus | |
| 56. | Ete | iki | small | |
| 57. | Nooe | nui | large | |
| 58. | Oe | ʻoe | you | |
| 59. | Moe | moe | to sleep | |
| 60. | Porore | pōloli | hungry | |
| 61. | Pooninne | ___ | sick | |
| 62. | Meme | mimi | to make water | |
| 63. | Tooti | kūkae | to ease nature | |
| 64. | Hone hone | honihoni | to salute | |
| 65. | Paha | paha | may be, perhaps | |
| 66. | Arou arou | ___ | great plenty | |
| 67. | Emotoo | moku | old, broke, much wore | |
| 68. | Matte matte | make | dead, to kill | |
| 69. | Oure | ʻaʻole | a denial of any kind | |
| 70. | Owhytoenoa | ʻo wai kou inoa | what is your name | |
| 71. | Poota poota | puka | a hole | |
| 72. | Poone poone | punipuni | a liar or deceitful person | |
| 73. | Tihi | kahi | one | |
| 74. | Earna* | ʻelua | two | |
| ||||
| 75. | Toro | kolu | three | |
| 76. | Hah | hā | four | |
| 77. | Areema | ʻelima | five | |
| 78. | Ahono | ʻeono | six | |
| 79. | Aheto | ʻehiku | seven | |
| 80. | Ahanou | ʻewalu | eight | |
| 81. | Heeva | iwa | nine | |
| 82. | Hoome | ʻumi | ten | |
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