An Account of the Natives of the Tonga Islands in the South Pacific Ocean: With an Original Grammar and Vocabulary of Their LanguageConstable, 1827 - 340 sider |
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Side 31
... sometimes adopted , is generally considered indicative of a quarrelsome disposition , because the challenge ought not to be made to one in particular , but to of any individual among those of a different place or party THE TONGA ISLANDS .
... sometimes adopted , is generally considered indicative of a quarrelsome disposition , because the challenge ought not to be made to one in particular , but to of any individual among those of a different place or party THE TONGA ISLANDS .
Side 37
... sometimes with Finow or other chiefs , and some- times by himself , he would frequently go out for two or three days together , among the neighbour- ing small islands , on a fishing excursion . As he was one evening returning homeward ...
... sometimes with Finow or other chiefs , and some- times by himself , he would frequently go out for two or three days together , among the neighbour- ing small islands , on a fishing excursion . As he was one evening returning homeward ...
Side 64
... sometimes be equally sorry , and make ample re- paration . On other occasions , however , his mind would remain for a considerable length of time in the same wild and ungovernable disposition : and the report of his depredations would ...
... sometimes be equally sorry , and make ample re- paration . On other occasions , however , his mind would remain for a considerable length of time in the same wild and ungovernable disposition : and the report of his depredations would ...
Side 84
... sometimes gives name to a country ; and withal it has acquired the epithet of sacred , taboo , and is thus sometimes called Tonga Táboo , denoting its excellence . From this circumstance it is erroneously noted down in our charts ...
... sometimes gives name to a country ; and withal it has acquired the epithet of sacred , taboo , and is thus sometimes called Tonga Táboo , denoting its excellence . From this circumstance it is erroneously noted down in our charts ...
Side 87
... sometimes great chiefs are thus visited by the gods , and the king himself has been inspired by Tali - y - toobo , the chief of the gods . During the time a priest is inspired , he is looked on with more or less veneration , according ...
... sometimes great chiefs are thus visited by the gods , and the king himself has been inspired by Tali - y - toobo , the chief of the gods . During the time a priest is inspired , he is looked on with more or less veneration , according ...
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An Account of the Natives of the Tonga Islands, in the South Pacific Ocean ... William Mariner Begrænset visning - 2012 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
aloo angi atoo Bolotoo booaca called canoe captain cava cava party ceremony club Co ho cocoa-nut considered Cook covi expressed fafine female Fiji Islands Finow Finow Fiji fonnooa fucca fytoca giate gimótóloo ginówtóloo give gnatoo gods gooa Hala Api Api Hamoa hand Hapai Islands Hihifo honour hotooa inferior king lahi Licoo lillé loto manatoo manoo-manoo Mariner matabooles mats matta means mohe momoco mooas natives noble nofo noun obito occasion ongofooloo Ooloo operation Papalangi performed person plural number Port au Prince present priest pronoun rank respect sometimes spear superior supposed taboo taha Talo Tangaloa tangata tense teoo thing tion toca togi toloo Tonga Islands Tonga language tooas Toobo Toobó Toa Toofoonga toogoo Tooitonga tow aloo tree vaca Vavaoo Veachi verb whilst women word wound yams
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Side 136 - it must not be supposed that these women are always easily won; the greatest attentions and the most fervent solicitations are sometimes requisite, even though there be no other lover in the way...
Side 121 - There is implanted in the human breast a knowledge or sentiment, which enables us sometimes, if not always, to distinguish between the beauty of disinterestedness and the foul ugliness of what is low, sordid, and selfish : and the effect of this sentiment is one of the strongest marks of character in the natives of these islands.
Side 149 - ... extended upon that arm, one end being still grasped by the left hand. The right hand, being now at liberty, is brought under the left fore-arm (which still remains in the same situation), and carried outwardly towards the left elbow, that it may again seize, in that situation, the end of the vau.
Side 113 - ... is broken, immortality is equally its reward ; nay, artificial bodies have equal good luck with men, and hogs, and yams. If an axe or a chisel is worn out or broken up, away flies its soul for the service of the gods. If a house is taken down, or...
Side 131 - I think that about two thirds of the women are married, and of this number full half remain with their husbands till death separates them; that is to say, full one third of the female population remain married till either themselves or their husbands die. The remaining two thirds are married and are soon divorced, and are married again perhaps three, four, or five times in their lives...
Side 119 - If there was any difference between them and the rest of the natives, it was that they were rather more given to reflection, and somewhat more taciturn, and probably greater observers of what was going forward.
Side 95 - ... houses (which were built like those of Tonga), without feeling any resistance. They at length saw some of the Hotooas, who passed through the substance of their bodies as if there was nothing there. The Hotooas recommended them to go away immediately, as they had no proper food for them, and promised them a fair wind and a speedy passage. They accordingly put directly to sea, and in two days, sailing with the utmost velocity, they arrived at Hamoa, (the Navigators' Island,) at which place they...
Side 156 - ... of the yam season. The object of this offering is to insure the protection of the gods, that their favour may be extended to the welfare of the nation generally, and in particular to the productions of the earth, of which yams are the most important.
Side 168 - Ye shall not round the corners of your heads, neither shalt thou mar the corners of thy beard. 28 Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks upon you : I am the LORD.
Side 166 - I witnessed more than one little child quarrelling for the honour (or rather out of bravado), of having it done. The finger is laid flat upon a block of wood. A knife, axe, or sharp stone is placed with the edge upon the line of proposed separation; and a powerful blow being given with a mallet or large stone, the operation is finished.