updated: 7/15/2019

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Concordance - Lāʻieikawai

hoʻomoe

1. vt. to incubate, hatch (eggs). Niʻihau.
2.
  • to put to sleep, to lay down;
  • to set, as a hen (Isa. 59.5)
  • to set, as a fish net;
  • to offer, as a sacrifice;
  • to deposit, as in banks;
  • to bring down, as a club (FS 241);
  • to "drop" a matter; to defer, postpone, rest a while; to table, as a motion;
  • to lay, as bricks or cement;
  • to subscribe, as to a newspaper.
  As an epithet for Kalākaua, moe probably refers to the kapu moe. cf. hoʻomoemoe
3. to arrange a match
4. caus/sim of moe₆, same as moea₂, to press onward, go straight toward...

(10)

Ch.5 p.29 para.1 sent.6A no laila, e hele ʻoe a i ka malihini, e lūlū lima ʻolua, a e hāʻawi aku i kou aloha nona i aloha pū ai ʻolua me ka ʻike aku o ka ʻaha ua hoʻomoe a pau wale ke kaua.”So, you go up to the stranger and shake hands, you two, and welcome him, to let the people see that the fight is altogether hushed up."
Ch.9 p.49 para.17 sent.3Mai hoʻomoe hou ʻoe iaʻu iā ʻAiwohikupua.”Do not force Aiwohikupua on me again."
Ch.14 p.72 para.1 sent.2ʻĪ ihola ʻo Hauaʻiliki, ʻo ia wale nō, “ʻAʻole nō kā hoʻi ʻoe e kala i makemake ai, hoʻolohi wale iho nō,” a no ka peʻahi a ke aliʻi wahine o Paliuli, hoʻomoe ihola kēia i ka nalu a pae pono akula ma kahi a Lāʻieikawai mā e noho mai ana.Hauailiki boasted to himself, "You wanted me all the time; you just delayed." And at the signal of the princess of Paliuli he lay upon the breaker and landed right where Laieikawai and her companions were sitting;
Ch.20 p.104 para.1 sent.2Ua hoʻomoe aʻela nō ko kākou kupuna wahine e like me kona makemake, ʻaʻohe a mākou ʻōlelo.marry him as your grandmother wishes; not a word from us.
Ch.21 p.107 para.4 sent.5A ma hope, he manu ʻokoʻa ka manu nana i lele mai a hoʻomoe i ua pūnana nei.And by-and-by another bird flew hither and sat upon the nest,
Ch.21 p.107 para.4 sent.6ʻAʻole naʻe wau i ʻike i ka lele ʻana aku ʻo ka manu hope nana i hoʻomoe ua pūnana nei, a puoho wale aʻela wau.[However I didn't see the last bird fly away who sat on the nest, and then I awoke.]
Ch.21 p.107 para.6 sent.2A ʻo ka manu hope nana i hoʻomoe ka pūnana, ʻo ʻoe nō ia.and the last bird who sat in the nest, that is you.
Ch.21 p.108 para.5 sent.2I ia manawa, hoʻomoe like lākou i nā papa o lākou, make ihola ʻo Halaaniani, pae aku lāua lā.Then they lay resting upon their boards; Halaaniani let his drop back, the other two rode in;
Ch.21 p.109 para.3 sent.2Iā Kekalukaluokēwā me Lāʻieikawai i hoʻomaka ai e hoʻomoe aku i ka nalu, e hopu aku ana ʻo Halaaniani ma nā kapuaʻi o Lāʻieikawai, a lilo maila ma kona lima, lilo akula ka papa heʻe nalu o Lāʻieikawai, pae akula naʻe ʻo Kekalukaluokēwā a kau a kahi maloʻo.As Kekalukaluokewa and Laieikawai lay resting on the wave, Halaaniani caught Laieikawai by the soles of her feet and got his arm around her, and Laieikawai's surf board was lost. Kekalukaluokewa rode in alone and landed on the dry beach.
Ch.21 p.111 para.2 sent.1I ia manawa, hoʻomoe koke ʻo Lāʻieikawai i ka papa, ʻo ka pae akula nō ia ma ke kōkua aku o Halaaniani.Then Laieikawai quickly lay down on the board and with Halaaniani's help rode toward the shore.

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