468 APPENDIX® 
Noth. 
O makou 
Makou 
Na makou 
O makou wale no 
Ke horoi nei makou 
Na makou e ave aku 
They and I only 
Washing (are) we 
We, i. e. our party, will 
take away 
The other cases and persons of the plural are as nume¬ 
rous and precise as in the singular and dual. The adjec¬ 
tive pronouns are possessive, demonstrative, interrogative, 
and relative. 
Adjectives. —The adjective follows the noun to which it 
belongs. There are several degrees of comparison, though 
the form of the adjective undergoes no change: the degrees 
are expressed by distinct words. There is, properly speak¬ 
ing, no superlative ; it is, however, expressed by prefixing 
the definite article, as ke kiekie , ke nui , the high, the 
great. 
Verbs.’— The verbs are active, passive, and neuter. The 
regular active verb, in the Hawaiian dialect, admits of four 
conjugations, as rohe , to hear, hoo-rohe , to cause to hear, 
rohe-ia, heard, and hoo-rohe-ia, to cause to be heard. Some 
of the verbs admit the second and fourth, but reject the 
third, as nolio , to sit, hoo-noho , to cause to sit, and hoo- 
noho-ia , to cause to be seated. Others again allow the 
third and fourth, but not the second, as pepehi , to beat, 
pepehi-ia , beaten, and hoo-pepehi-ia , to cause to be beaten. 
The verbs usually precede the nouns and pronouns, as 
here au, go I, and e noho marie oe , sit still you, instead of, 
I go, and you sit still. 
The adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, and interjec¬ 
tions, are numerous; but a description of them, and their 
relative situation in the construction of their sentences, 
would take up too much room. 
Their numerals resemble the Malayan more than any 
other part of their language. 
NUMERALS. 
A kahi one. arima five, 
arua two. aono six. 
atom three.—ahaaiour. ahitu seven. 
avaru eight, 
aiva nine. 
Umi ten. 
