1 / 12

my k o ʻu k a ʻu

my k o ʻu k a ʻu. The Hawaiian Look at Possessions. possession. Shows ownership Relationship of owner and possession The Hawaiian System divides every possession into two different realms These realms are known as: o-class & a-class (kino-o & kino-a). Kino- O.

claral
Download Presentation

my k o ʻu k a ʻu

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. mykoʻukaʻu • The Hawaiian Look • at Possessions

  2. possession • Shows ownership • Relationship of owner and possession • The Hawaiian System divides every possession into two different realms • These realms are known as: • o-class & a-class (kino-o & kino-a)

  3. Kino-O • What determines possessions • in this kino? • - you have no choice • (body parts, siblings, parent, grandparent, emotion) • - itʻs a birthright • (name, age, etc) • - you can go in it or on it • ( clothing, transportation, house/buildings, etc)

  4. How do you use it? • The easiest way is to use a “possessive pronoun” • my, your, his, hers, ours, etc. • Letʻs use MY.... • koʻu (kino-o) • kaʻu (kino-a)

  5. kino-o • koʻu inoa- my name • koʻu ʻāina- my land • koʻu lauoho- my hair • koʻu hoaaloha- my friend Remember the rule: kino-o is used when the possession is something that... ... is a birthright ... you have no choice ... you can go in or on it

  6. kino-o phraseused in a sentence • koʻu inoa- my name • ʻO Ikaika ko’u inoa. • koʻu ʻāina- my land • ʻO Kāneʻohe koʻu ʻāina. • koʻu lauoho- my hair • Lōʻihi koʻu lauoho. • koʻu hoaaloha- my friend • Aia au me koʻu hoaaloha.

  7. Kino-A • What determines possessions • in this kino? • - you do have a choice • (children, food, acquired possessions, • professions, modern inventions, pets, spouse)

  8. kino-a • ka’u haumana- my student • kaʻu ʻeke- my bag • kaʻu haʻawina- my lesson • kaʻu meaʻai- my food Remember the rule: kino-a is used when the possession is something that... ... you do have a choice

  9. kino-a phraseused in a sentence • ka’u haumana- my student • ʻO Kanani kaʻu haumana. • kaʻu ʻeke- my bag • Aia kaʻu ʻeke ma ke pākaukau. • kaʻu haʻawina- my lesson • Maʻalahi kaʻu haʻawina. • kaʻu meaʻai- my food • ʻOno kaʻu meaʻai i kēia lā.

  10. summary of possessive • Possession shows _____________ • ownership • It is the relationship of __________ and _________ • owner , possession • There are _____ different realms in Hawaiian. • two • The realms are ___________ & __________ • kino-o & kino-a

  11. Which Kino? • children • Kino-a • land, home • Kino-o • things you can choose • Kino-a • name, age • Kino-o • pets • Kino-a • clothes • Kino-o • modern inventions • Kino-a • Younger siblings • Kino-o

  12. Ua Pau

More Related