Definitions
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun Discourse; conversation.
- noun A Middle English form of
meal . - noun A Middle English form of
meal . - To speak; talk.
- To chatter; twitter, as birds.
- To call or bring together; as semble.
- noun A cup or bowl.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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The author of the mele was a Hawaiian named John Meha, who died some years ago.
Unwritten Literature of Hawaii The Sacred Songs of the Hula Nathaniel Bright Emerson 1877
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-- The composer of the music and the author of the mele was a Hawaiian named John Meha, of the Hawaiian Band, who died some ten years ago, at the age of 40 years.
Unwritten Literature of Hawaii The Sacred Songs of the Hula Nathaniel Bright Emerson 1877
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Some parts of this mele, which is a love-song, have defied the author's most strenuous efforts to penetrate their deeper meaning.
Unwritten Literature of Hawaii The Sacred Songs of the Hula Nathaniel Bright Emerson 1877
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_poo-pua'a_, leader of the olapa, calls the mele (_kahea i ka mele_) -- that is, he begins its recitation -- in a tone differing but little from that of ordinary conversation, a sing-song recitation, a vocalization less stilted and less punctilious than that usually employed in the utterance of the oli or mele.
Unwritten Literature of Hawaii The Sacred Songs of the Hula Nathaniel Bright Emerson 1877
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"The priest Eoppo sang a long mele about Kahekili's mother and his mother's mother, and all their mothers all the way back to the beginning of time," Kumuhana resumed.
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Barefooted, with no adornment of femininity, clad in a shapeless shift of much-washed cotton, with age-withered face and labour-gnarled hands, she cringed before him and crooned a mele in his honour, and, still cringing, put the lei around his neck.
SHIN-BONES 2010
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Hawaiian mumbling and chanting a toothless mele of Bella and
ON THE MAKALOA MAT 2010
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He did not know me, and when Ahuna told him who I was, he grovelled at my feet, almost clasping them, and mumbled a mele of all my line out of a lipless mouth.
SHIN-BONES 2010
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And while she chanted her mele, the old crone's shrewd fingers lomied or massaged Bella's silk-stockinged legs from ankle and calf to knee and thigh.
ON THE MAKALOA MAT 2010
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Both Bella's and Martha's eyes were luminous-moist, as the old retainer repeated the lomi and the mele to Martha, and as they talked with her in the ancient tongue and asked the immemorial questions about her health and age and great-great-grandchildren — she who had lomied them as babies in the great house at Kilohana, as her ancestresses had lomied their ancestresses back through the unnumbered generations.
ON THE MAKALOA MAT 2010
treeseed commented on the word mele
A chant or song that accompanies a hula
It was developed in the Hawaiian Islands by the Polynesians who originally settled there. The hula dramatizes or comments on the mele.
_Wikipedia
February 19, 2008