- sugar cane
- Kō.See bagasse and sayings kea3, pūkō.Clump of sugar cane, pū kō.Cane leaf, lau kō, lau'ō, lākō, lā'ō.Sugar-cane tassel, kīlepalepa kō.Sugar-cane stem and tassel, pua kō.Cane growing along a border, pae kō.Sugar-cane refuse, kō 'aina, laina.Sugar cane held up with sticks, pū kō ko'o, pū ko'o.Sugar canes used in medicine: kō kea, kō honua 'ula, 'ainakea (pū kea) manulele.Canes used in love magic: manulele, papa'a, pilimai, laukona.Other canes (alternate names are in parentheses); 'aina kea, 'aina kea melemele, 'akilolo, 'akilolo 'ula'ula (nānahu, red mutant), 'akoki, 'ala'ihi, 'āwela (pua'ole), 'āwela melemele (pua'ole), 'āweoweo, halāli'i, hinahina, hou, 'ili'ōpua, kāni'o, kauila, kea (kō kea), kihe, kōaki, kō Pākē, kō Palani, lahaina (kenikeni), lahi, lahi kahakaha 'ākala, lauloa, lehu, māikoiko (kō 'ele'ele), māikoiko kahakaha, maka'ā, manini, mā'ohe'ohe, mīkokoi, moano, nika, 'ōhi'a, 'oliana, opukea, pa'apa'a (ho'opa'apa'a), pailolo, pakaiea, pakaweli, pakē, piliko'a, pōhina, puahala, uahi-a-Pele (na'aukake), 'uala, 'uala lehu, uhu, 'ula'ula, ule'ohi'u ('āwela melemele, uluhui), wai'ōhi'a, wehe hala (wehewehe hala).
English-Hawaiian dictionary. 2015.