It means:
Ame- And
Mahalo- Thank you
A hui hou- See you later
Malama pono- Be good or take care
Mahalo, a hui hou malama pono: Thank you, take care until we meet again.
Mahalo in Hawaiian means that you are very thankful for something that some one else does..... However it also means Hello or goodbye
It is properly spelled mahalo, and it means "thank you".
Mahalo is the Hawaiian word for thank you. It did not originally mean exactly thank you but instead can mean thanks, gratitude, praise, esteem or admiration.
In Hawaiian, you can say "mahalo no ka aʻo ʻana mai iaʻu" to mean "thank you for teaching me".
Mahalo means thank you!
Thank you
Mahalo in Hawaiian means that you are very thankful for something that some one else does..... However it also means Hello or goodbye
Thank you in the Hawaiian language is Mahalo.
It is properly spelled mahalo, and it means "thank you".
Aloha: Take care of each other
Mahalo is the Hawaiian word for thank you. It did not originally mean exactly thank you but instead can mean thanks, gratitude, praise, esteem or admiration.
In Hawaiian, you can say "mahalo no ka aʻo ʻana mai iaʻu" to mean "thank you for teaching me".
"Malama pono" is short for "e malama pono," and expresses "take good care," with "of yourself" understood. In this instance, "e" is the hortative particle, signifying an imperative. "Malama" (with a kahako over the first a) = vt. care for, tend, protect "Pono" = vs. completely, properly, carefully
Aloha. You probably mean 'mahalo' which is simply thank you. So, the next time some says "Mahalo" to you, smile and say, "He mea ʻole [hey may uh olay]" (you're welcome). A hui hou (until next time)
Mahalo means thank you!
Kylee still doesn't mean anything, even if it can be translated. Mahalo! Aloha: CORRECTED: If you mean the name Kylee, there are 2 rtanslations in HI`ian.... 1- Kile (kee-lay), and 2- Kileni (kee-lay-nee) There is no Y in the Hawaiian alphabet. You need a Hawaiian word to have a Hawaiian meaning.
"Nui loa" is a Hawaiian phrase that translates to "very or greatly big" in English. It is often used to emphasize the magnitude or size of something. For example, "mahalo nui loa" means "thank you very much" in Hawaiian.