The baby name Keaweamohalapulehuokalani is a Male name and is pronounced {'ipa': '/ke.a.we.a.mo.ha.la.pu.le.hu.o.ka.la.ni/', 'phonetic': 'keh-AH-weh-ah-moh-HAH-lah-poo-LEH-hoh-oh-KAH-lah-nee'}.
Keaweamohalapulehuokalani is Hawaiian in Origin.
The baby name Keaweamohalapulehuokalani is a Male name and is pronounced {'ipa': '/ke.a.we.a.mo.ha.la.pu.le.hu.o.ka.la.ni/', 'phonetic': 'keh-AH-weh-ah-moh-HAH-lah-poo-LEH-hoh-oh-KAH-lah-nee'}.
Keaweamohalapulehuokalani is Hawaiian in Origin.
Keaweamohalapulehuokalani is a Hawaiian sentence-name composed of ancestral name Keawe, mōhala “to bloom, unfold,” pūlehu (a term for warming/roasting over embers, sometimes used metaphorically), and o ka lani “of the heavens/royalty.” As with many long Hawaiian names, the full sense is poetic and context-bound - roughly evoking “Keawe, the blossoming [one], gently warmed and tended under heaven/royal auspices” - but families may preserve a more specific interpretation.
Documented chiefly lineages used Keawe as a personal name (notably Keaweʻīkekahialiʻiokamoku), and extended honorific constructions like this flourished in the 18th–19th centuries, with renewed visibility in the late-20th-century Hawaiian language/cultural renaissance. The name is unisex in Hawaiian tradition. Variant spellings reflect modern diacritics and spacing - Keaweamōhalapūlehuokalani; Keawe a Mōhala Pūlehu o ka Lani - and everyday call-names often shorten to Keawe, Mōhala, Pūlehu, or Lani. Related compounds include Keaweokalani and Mohalalani.
Keaweamohalapulehuokalani turns up in none of the birth registries or name datasets we cover. Such a name is generally either rare, regional or traditional, or a brand-new coinage. Either way, it remains a genuinely rare choice.
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