DA‘IDIENA 
da‘idiena U., da‘idiana S., to be in peace, to 
be in safety. diana. ani dinge ni 
de‘idiana, in a day of salvation. 
da‘idiananga v. n., i‘o ni de‘idiananga, to 
dwell in safety. 
da‘ilama U., v., to be in peace. 
da‘ilama‘a adj., peaceful. 
da‘ilama‘asi v. tr., to be at peace; e dé‘ila- 
ma‘asira, they were in peace. 
da‘ita‘a v., to be in trouble. n., trouble. 
dala in the reduplicated form da‘adala used 
to denote numbers above ten, not a full 
tally; e da‘adala, it was a number over 
ten; awala da‘adala, an uneven tally; nga 
muini da‘adala, more than ten. Fagani 
matara. 
dalao to have the skin broken; ‘aeku e dalao, 
the skin of my leg is broken, abraded. 
dalo 1. a littoral tree (Calophyllum inophyl- 
lum); when growing by the landing- 
places the dalo is the scene of taho 
lalamoa, the payment for men killed, 
suu ola, also as the place for offerings 
to ‘akalo; dalo ni me‘esu, the paule tree. 
Viti ndilo. 
dalo 2. wwe dalo, to clear the throat of mucus. 
daluma U., middle. danume S. 
dama-(ku) U., fellow, mate. cf. sama. 
damaku, my fellow; dama diu, of 
unequal length. 
dama‘a rank, row, of men in a dance. 
damadiu to overlap. cf. dama. 
damu U., v. i., to eat areca nut; demudemu 
totoria, a phase of the moon. 
damulaa areca nut and pepper leaf for 
chewing. idemu, loo 2. sédru‘e. 
damu(‘itr., e dimu‘ia hou meme ana Kiiramo, 
he chewed a ball of meme calling on 
Kiiramo. San Cristoval tamu; Lau 
kamu, to chew areca nut; Maori kamu, 
eat; Samoa samusamu, to eat scraps. 
damuteke an inclosure sacred to an ‘akalo 
inside a taoha or toohi round the central 
pillar and fenced with a heap of stones, 
or outside the door of dwelling-houses, 
into which areca-nut skins or scraps of 
food may be thrown without fear of an 
enemy getting them and using them for 
malign purposes. 
dana U., a bamboo for carrying water, holes 
being made through the joints. 
dani U., tobe daylight. déangi,S. hé‘idenie‘i; 
ahuraa déni, to be on the move before 
daylight; apau deni, toward morning; 
e dani ha‘ahulee, next day; e déni ‘oto, 
it is day; marawa ni deni, daybreak. 
da‘ideni daylight, by daylight. 
dinita‘i haudinga po‘o dénita‘i, the follow- 
ing day. 
danite‘ini tr., of the daylight dawning upon 
a person. Florida dani, day; danihagi. 
danu, da‘udenu S., daidenu U., v. i., to bale, 
to draw water; dainu oku, to catch the 
palolo worm with coconut nets; dénu 
wei, to bale, to draw water; oku denu, 
name of a month, November, when the 
palolo worm appears. idenu. 
n., peace. 
danu (continued). 
dainu‘i tr., to bale, to whet, to sprinkle 
with water. 
danume-(ku) middle, waist: with locative 7; 
dinumeku, my waist; i denume, in the 
midst; 7 denumana hdnue, in the middle 
of the island. 
dingi1.S., to be daylight. dani, U. hé‘iden- 
gie’i. Wango deni. ddangi hoowa, the 
next day; e dangi ‘oto, it is day; e déngi 
paro, as soon as it was day; idengi, 
tomorrow; susu‘e dingi, every day. 
dd‘idengi by daylight; melu hule da‘idengi 
ta‘ane, we arrived in daylight. 
dangite‘ini tr., of the day dawning upon a 
person; e dangite‘ini ‘emelu, day dawned 
upon us. Lau dani, 
dangi 2. n., wind; dangi ka‘a ooru ike, there 
was no wind at all; hat maai dengi 
he‘iliune, the four winds; getolana ddngi, 
getohaana ddngi, a wind gone down, 
qeto; ramohaana déngi, a gale, ramo. 
Mota lang, Florida dani, Polynesian 
langi, Malay angin. 
dango 1. S., n., a tree; dango mwamwako‘a, a 
prickly tree; dango ni haka, papaya; 
dangona mwakana, trees of the field; 
hai dango, a log; hoi dango, U. (Ahi‘a 
use), papaya; hoi dango, S., the kidneys; 
huesi dango, S., the kidneys; imiimine 
dango, root of a tree; mu ‘apai reu ana 
mu dango, the leaves of the trees; rat 
dango, S., a plank; takai dango, a flower. 
dango 2. S., n., firewood; roto dango, to cut 
firewood; hite dango, to split firewood; 
so‘o dango, S., to gather firewood. 
Malagasy trano. 
dao U., ape dao, to be level, of country. 
daoha, daodaoha U., v. i., to be ill. 
daohanga v. n., sickness, illness. 
daoha. 
dara (ku) n., forehead; daraku, my forehead; 
7 na‘ona dara, on the forehead. 
daraha‘ini S., v. tr., to fit a shell ring (hato) on 
the arm, to impale. Wango darasi. 
darasahu n., a bird, a tern (Sterna frontalis), 
having a white mark above the bill. 
dara, sahu 1. 
darasi S., deresi U., to draw a thing out of its 
covering, to unsheathe. 
dari déri mwaa, a torrent running only in the 
rains and dry (mwaa) at other times. 
da‘ideri‘e. 
daro, dadaro 1. v. i., to hit, to beat, to strike 
with a stick. 2. v. i., to cast a fishing- 
line for garfish (mwanole), to whiff for 
sardines with toohe‘o. 
daro‘i tr., to hit a person with a stick. 
daronga‘ini U., tr., to strike and overthrow. 
daru‘e pers. pron., dual 3, suffixed to nouns 
and to gerundives and to verbal nouns 
used as prepositions; ‘amduriladaru’‘e, 
they two alive; ‘amadaru‘e, the father of 
those two; ‘upuderu‘e, their middle. 
diui.v. tr. and v. i., to do, to attempt, to cause, 
to make, to take, to get, to obtain; déw . 
dunge, ordeal with hot stores. M. Ae, 
Wango 
