Puʻu Līlīnoe (Maunakea)

Inoa | Name(s)

Puʻu Līlīnoe, Līlīnoe

Hiʻona ʻāina | Land characteristic: Puʻu Pele

Hiʻona ʻāina nona kēia wahi | Feature(s) that contain this place: Maunakea; Kaohe Mauka

Hōʻuluʻulu manaʻo

He puʻu pele kēia i kapa ʻia kona inoa no ka akua wahine o Līlīnoe, kahi mea e noho ana ma ka mauna ma kona mau kaikuahine, ʻo ia hoʻi o Poliʻahu, Waiau, a me Kahoupokāne. Me kēlā manaʻo, ʻo kēia paha kahi e noho ana ʻO Līlīnoe, ke akua wahine o ka uhi wai i ʻike ʻia ma ka mauna i nā wā huʻihuʻi.

Description

Peak (12,956 feet), Mauna Kea qd., Hawaiʻi, also called Puʻu-Līlīnoe, named for a goddess of mists (Līlīnoe), sister of the more famous Poli-ahu, goddess of snow. (Place Names of Hawaii)

ʻŌlelo kuhikuhi

E koho iā “Puʻu Līlīnoe” no nā kumuwaiwai pili i ka puʻu ma Maunakea.

Instructions

Use for Puʻu Līlīnoe, the volcanic cone found on Maunakea.

Moʻokūʻauhau | Genealogy

Akua | Deity: Līlīnoe

Kūmole | Source(s)

“Līlīnoe,” Wehewehe Wikiwiki: Hawaiian Language Dictionaries.

“Puu Lilinoe,” Inoa ʻĀina Hawaiʻi Database, Ulukau: The Hawaiian Electronic Library.

Pukui, Mary Kawena, Samuel H. (Samuel Hoyt) Elbert, and Esther T. Mookini. Place Names of Hawaii. Rev. and enl. Ed. Honolulu: University Press of Hawaii, 1976. Ulukau: The Hawaiian Electronic Library.

Hoʻopili ʻia i | Applied to: Lāʻieikawai, Lilinoe, Waiau, and Kahoupokane

Mea haku | Created by: Na ka hui ʻimi naʻauao o Ka Wai Hāpai