roaʻa
Tahitian
Etymology
From Proto-Polynesian *rauka (compare with Maori roaka (“abundant”) and Hawaiian loaʻa (“to get, to acquire”)) from Proto-Polynesian *lawa-ka– compare with ravaʻi ("suffice") and roa (“very, entirely”). Also doublet of noaʻa[1]– see both Maori rehu and nehu for similar free variation of initial phonemes in related languages.
Verb
roaʻa
References
- ^ Ross Clark and Simon J. Greenhill, editors (2011), “roaka”, in “POLLEX-Online: The Polynesian Lexicon Project Online”, in Oceanic Linguistics, volume 50, number 2, pages 551-559
Further reading
- Yves Lemaître, Lexique du tahitien contemporain (Current Tahitian lexicon), 1995.
- “roaʻa” in Dictionnaire en ligne Tahitien/Français (Online Tahitian–French Dictionary), by the Tahitian Academy.