haole

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Hawaiian haole.

Noun

haole (plural haole or haoles)

  1. (Hawaii) A non-Hawaiian, usually specifically a Caucasian.
    • 1946, Armine Von Tempski, Bright Spurs (page 122)
      I had never known any haoles except Elmer and Marks and they were ice cold affairs. Everyone was always glad when their twice-a-month visit was pau. The very island seemed to sigh with relief []
    • 2009, January 18, “Lois-ann Yamanaka”, in This Man Is an Island:
      And the white guy who ate Rice-A-Roni with butter was the haole who didn’t speak pidgin or eat real rice.
    • 2012, Julia Flynn Siler, Lost Kingdom, Grove Press, p. 27:
      Commerce was flourishing in the kingdom and the rising merchant class was made up largely of haole rather than Hawaiians.

Derived terms

Anagrams


Hawaiian

Etymology

Noun

haole

  1. foreigner
  2. Caucasian
  3. Englishman, Englishwoman, American

Verb

haole

  1. (stative) foreign
  2. (stative) Caucasian, white
  3. (stative) English, American
    ʻōlelo haole — English language
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.