Learning ‘Ōlelo: Junkalunka

junkalunka_smjunkalunka

(juhn-KAH-luhn-KAH) (adj) Pidgin description of something that is old, broken down, used up.

Example

English: Perhaps we should borrow your mother’s car since the road is steep and winding and your car tires are bald and the brakes are soft.

Pidgin: Pali road? In that junkalunka thing? No way!

Note: ‘Ōlelo is a Hawaiian word meaning language, speech, word, etc.  To see the current list of Hawaiian and Pidgin words, definitions, and usage please click on

Pidgin Dictionary

 

Learning ‘Ōlelo: daikon legs

daikon legs

(DYE-kon leh-eggs) (n) Pidgin description of legs that a short, fat, and white.

Example

English: “Interesting choice, Michi-san. Have you seen these floor-length prom dresses?”

Pidgin: “Michi, you blind? That mini shows off your daikon legs!”

Note: ‘Ōlelo is a Hawaiian word meaning language, speech, word, etc.  To see the current list of Hawaiian and Pidgin words, definitions, and usage please click on

Pidgin Dictionary

 

Learning ‘Ōlelo: calabash

Calabash

(cal-lah-BASH) A bowl or container often made of wood or a hollowed gourd. When used to refer to people, it implies a close friend or relative, i.e. someone so familiar he would eat out of the same serving bowl.

Example

English: “James is my father’s best friend’s son who grew up like a member of our family.”

Pidgin: “Jimmy? Calabash cousin.”

Note: ‘Ōlelo is a Hawaiian word meaning language, speech, word, etc.  To see the current list of Hawaiian and Pidgin words, definitions, and usage please click on

Pidgin Dictionary

 

Learning ‘Ōlelo: kuleana

Kuleana

(koo-lee-ah-na) (nvt) Hawaiian word for right, privilege, concern, area of responsibility.

Example

English: “As responsible human beings we must take care of the earth! There are wastrels among us who must heed my words or our land will become  a vast wasteland of corruption and filth where none can live! I call on you now to change your ways before it is too late!”

Pidgin: “What you mean, ‘not your kuleana?’ You breathing, right? You living, right? Taking care of the ‘āina is everybody’s kuleana, brah!”

Note: ‘Ōlelo is a Hawaiian word meaning language, speech, word, etc.  To see the current list of Hawaiian and Pidgin words, definitions, and usage please click on

Pidgin Dictionary

 

Learning ‘Ōlelo: futless

Futless

(FUHT-less) Adj. Pidgin for bored, frustrated, confused, unsure of what to do next. Literally without fart.

Example

English: Jay is so bored, he’s sitting in on the couch, flicking the blinds, and staring at telephone lines.

Pidgin: Ho, Jay futless, yeah?

Note: ‘Ōlelo is a Hawaiian word meaning language, speech, word, etc.  To see the current list of Hawaiian and Pidgin words, definitions, and usage please click on

Pidgin Dictionary

 

Learning ‘Ōlelo: junkenpo

junkenpo

(j’un-ken-POH) Pidgin for rock, paper scissors from the Japanese  jan ken pon. How you choose who picks first, does the dishes, or buys the round. As a kid on Maui we’d swing our closed fist in time with a chanted rhyme and shoot three times for a two out of three win:

Junkenpo (shoot),
I can show (shoot),
Wailuku, Wailuku,
Bomb, bomb, SHOW! (shoot)

 

Example

English: Todd, let’s do rock, paper, scissors to see who has to stay and babysit.

Pidgin: Junkenpo, brah. Loser sits, winner splits.

Note: ‘Ōlelo is a Hawaiian word meaning language, speech, word, etc.  To see the current list of words, definitions, and usage please click on ‘Ōlelo Archive.