1. nvs. • weary, tired, fatigued; wearisome, burdensome, tiresome, laborious, tedious;
• burden, wearisome or tedious task;
• labor, work, pains, toil.
2. nvt. a child or other person tended and raised with devoted care; to care for and attend with care and affection; protégé. |
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| Ch.3 p.15 para.7 sent.1 | I ia pō iho, i loko o kona manawa hiamoe, hālāwai maila kona akua me ia ma ka hihiʻo, ʻī maila, “Ua ʻike au i kou luhi a me kou hoʻomanawanui ʻana me ke ake e loaʻa iā ʻoe ka moʻopuna a Waka me kou manaʻo hoʻi e loaʻa kou pōmaikaʻi no kāna moʻopuna mai. | That night, in his sleep, his god came to him in a vision and said; "I have seen the pains and the patience with which you have striven to find Waka's grandchild, thinking to gain honor through her grandchild. |
| Ch.6 p.36 para.1 sent.1 | Piʻi akula lāua i loko o nā ulu lāʻau loloa, i ka hihia paʻa o ka nāhelehele me ka luhi a hiki lāua ma kahi e kokoke ana i Paliuli, lohe lāua i ka leo o ka moa. | They made way with difficulty through high forest trees and thickets of tangled brush, until, at a place close to Paliuli, they heard the crow of a cock. |
| Ch.8 p.43 para.3 sent.1 | I kekahi lā aʻe, wae aʻela ʻo ʻAiwohikupua i mau hoe waʻa hou, no ka mea, ua maopopo i ke aliʻi ua luhi nā hoe waʻa mua. | The next day Aiwohikupua picked out fresh paddlers, for the chief knew that the first were tired out. |
| Ch.12 p.66 para.5 sent.2 | I loko naʻe o ko lākou noho ʻana, ʻaʻole lākou i ʻike i ko lākou luhi ma ia noho ʻana. | and while they dwelt there never did they weary of life. |
| Ch.14 p.73 para.6 sent.3 | Ma kēia hele ʻana a lāua i uka o Paliuli, ua nui ka luhi, a no ia luhi, hāʻule akula lāua a hiamoe. | For weariness of the journey up to Paliuli, they fell down and slept. |
| Ch.26 p.135 para.2 sent.1 | A pau kāna pule ʻana, hoʻi maila, a hiamoe ihola, a i loko a kona manawa hiamoe, hiki maila ma o ua makāula nei ke kuhikuhi ma ka hihiʻo mai kona akua mai, me ka ʻōlelo mai, “Ua hiki mai ka manawa e hoʻokō ʻia ai kou makemake, a e kuʻu ai hoʻi ka luhi o kou ʻimi ʻana i ka loa. | After praying he came back and went to sleep, and as he slept the seer received the assurance in a vision from his god, saying, "The time has come to fulfill your wishes, to free you from the weariness of your long search. |
| Ch.30 p.161 para.4 sent.4 | No laila wau i ukali ai me ka hoʻomanawanui i loko o ka luhi a me ka ʻīnea, i loko o nā pilikia he nui. | ''For this have I followed you persistently through danger and cost and through hard weariness, |
| Ch.32 p.174 para.6 sent.1 | A pau kēia mau kamaʻilio a lāua ma ke kaʻawale, hele akula ʻo Kapūkaʻihaoa me ke aliʻi pū a hiki i o Lāʻielohelohe lā, ʻī akula, “E kuʻu luhi, eia ke kāne. | At the end of their secret conference, Kapukaihaoa went with the chief to Laielohelohe. Said he, "My ward, here is the husband, |
| Ch.32 p.174 para.6 sent.3 | Keʻehia kūlana a paʻa, a nānā mai i ka mea nāna i luhi.” | a solid fortune, nothing can shake its foundation; and look to the one who bore the burden." |
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