Footnote 140:[ (return) ] Wai-anue-nue. Rainbow falls and the river that makes the leap.
Footnote 141:[ (return) ] Kolo-pule-pule. Another branch of the Wailuku stream.
Footnote 142:[ (return) ] Pili-kau. To hang low, said of a cloud.
Footnote 143:[ (return) ] Haili. A region in the inland, woody, part of Hilo.
Footnote 144:[ (return) ] Pa-ieie. A well-wooded part of Hilo, once much resorted to by bird-hunters; a place celebrated in Hawaiian song.
Footnote 145:[ (return) ] Mokau-lele. A wild, woody region In the interior of Hilo.
Footnote 146:[ (return) ] Malua. Name given to a wind from a northerly or northwesterly direction on several of the islands. The full form is Malua-lua.
Footnote 147:[ (return) ] Pu’u-eo. A village in the Hilo district near Puna.
Footnote 148:[ (return) ] Iwi-honua. Literally a bone of the earth: a projecting rock or a shoal; if in the water, an object to be avoided by the surf-rider. In this connection see note e, p. 36.