hono
Appearance
Carabayo
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Compare Yuri oná (“son”) (Martius' spelling).
Noun
[edit]hono
References
[edit]- Seifart and Echeverri, Evidence for the Identification of Carabayo, the Language of an Uncontacted People of the Colombian Amazon, as Belonging to the Tikuna–Yurí Linguistic Family, PLoS ONE 9(4) (2014)
Hawaiian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Polynesian *faŋa₃ from Proto-Oceanic *paŋa (“to gape open”); compare with Māori whanga (“bay, gulf”), Tahitian faʻa (“valley”), Tongan fanga, and Samoan faga (“bay”)[1][2][3]
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]hono
Derived terms
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Tregear, Edward (1891), Maori-Polynesian Comparative Dictionary[1], Wellington, New Zealand: Lyon and Blair, page 610
- ^ Ross Clark and Simon J. Greenhill, editors (2011), “faga.2”, in “POLLEX-Online: The Polynesian Lexicon Project Online”, in Oceanic Linguistics, volume 50, number 2, pages 551–9
- ^ M. Ross, A. Pawley, M. Osmond, editors (2003), The Lexicon of Proto-Oceanic[2], volume 2: The Physical Environment, Australian National University, →ISBN, page 47
Lotha Naga
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Central Naga *haːn(a).
Noun
[edit]hono
Derived terms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Murry, K. R.; Yanthan, J. T.; Patton, Alumo (1978), Anglo-Lotha Vocabulary, Wokha, Nagaland: Kyong Academy, page 27
Māori
[edit]Verb
[edit]hono
Categories:
- Carabayo lemmas
- Carabayo nouns
- Hawaiian terms inherited from Proto-Polynesian
- Hawaiian terms derived from Proto-Polynesian
- Hawaiian terms inherited from Proto-Oceanic
- Hawaiian terms derived from Proto-Oceanic
- Hawaiian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Hawaiian lemmas
- Hawaiian nouns
- Hawaiian terms with archaic senses
- Lotha Naga terms inherited from Proto-Central Naga
- Lotha Naga terms derived from Proto-Central Naga
- Lotha Naga lemmas
- Lotha Naga nouns
- Māori lemmas
- Māori verbs