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ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi for English speakers

  1. Flashcards
  2. What is Hawaiian?
  3. Core Vocabulary — Top 100
  4. Essential Grammar
  5. Pronunciation — the ʻokina & kahakō
  6. Common Mistakes
  7. Learning Resources
  8. Culture & Context
  9. Related Guides

1. Flashcards

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2. What is Hawaiian?

Hawaiian (ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi) is the Polynesian language of the Hawaiian Islands, closely related to Māori, Tahitian, and Samoan. It is one of the two official languages of the U.S. state of Hawaiʻi, alongside English.1

By the 1980s Hawaiian had fewer than 50 native-speaking children and was close to extinction. A remarkable grassroots revival — Pūnana Leo immersion preschools, Hawaiian-medium schools, and university programmes — has since brought the number of speakers back into the tens of thousands. Learning it today is participating in one of the world's great language-revitalisation stories.

Why learn Hawaiian?

3. Core Vocabulary — Top 100 (1–100)

The 100 most useful high-frequency Hawaiian words and phrases, written with the ʻokina (ʻ) and kahakō (macron) as in modern orthography. This is the exact deck used by the flashcard trainer above. Use the search box to filter.

#HawaiianEnglish

4. Essential Grammar

Hawaiian is a Polynesian language with Verb–Subject–Object word order and no verb conjugation for person or number. Tense and aspect are marked by particles that bracket the verb, and there is no grammatical gender.

Articles: ka / ke /

The singular article is ke before words beginning with k, e, a, o (the "KEAO" rule) and ka elsewhere. The plural is .

WordArticleMeaning
kanaka (person)ke kanakathe person
wahine (woman)ka wahinethe woman
(plural) kānakathe people

Tense / aspect particles

FrameExampleMeaning
ke … neiKe hele nei auI am going (now)
ua …Ua hele auI went / I have gone
e … anaE hele ana auI will go / I am going to go
e … (command)E hele!Go! (imperative)

A-class vs O-class possession

Hawaiian splits possession into two classes. O-class is used for things you did not choose — body parts, relatives, land, things that contain you (koʻu inoa, my name; koʻu makuahine, my mother). A-class is for things you acquire or control (kaʻu puke, my book; kaʻu keiki, my child you are responsible for).

A/O-class assignment is the classic Hawaiian puzzle for English speakers. There are rules, but many items are simply memorised. Start with the high-frequency relatives and body parts (all O-class).

5. Pronunciation — the ʻokina & kahakō

Hawaiian has only five vowels (a e i o u) and eight consonants (h k l m n p w + the ʻokina). The two diacritics are not decoration — they change meaning.

LetterSoundExample
a/a/ as in "father" (short) / "ah" held (ā)aloha
e/e/ as in "bet"keiki (child)
i/i/ as in "machine"iʻa (fish)
o/o/ as in "sole"moana (ocean)
u/u/ as in "moon"nui (big)
w/v/ or /w/ — often "v" after i/e, "w" after u/owai (water), Hawaiʻi
ʻglottal stop (the catch in "uh-oh")ʻāina (land)

Stress normally falls on the second-to-last syllable, and on every long (macroned) vowel.

6. Common Mistakes

7. Learning Resources

8. Culture & Context

Aloha is bigger than "hello"

The word aloha bundles love, compassion, breath, and presence (alo = presence/face, = breath). It is a greeting, a farewell, and an ethic. Aloha ʻāina — love of the land — is a foundational political and spiritual value.

Pono and balance

The state motto, Ua mau ke ea o ka ʻāina i ka pono, turns on pono — rightness, balance, doing what is correct in relationship to people and place. It has no exact English equivalent.

Mauka and makai

Hawaiians orient not by compass but by the land: mauka (toward the mountains) and makai (toward the sea). You will hear directions given this way everywhere in Hawaiʻi.

Notes

  1. U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Native Hawaiian Relations, "E ola ka ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi!," accessed June 3, 2026, https://www.doi.gov/hawaiian/%CA%BB%C5%8Dlelo-hawai%CA%BBi.

Bibliography

U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Native Hawaiian Relations. "E ola ka ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi!" Accessed June 3, 2026. https://www.doi.gov/hawaiian/%CA%BB%C5%8Dlelo-hawai%CA%BBi.