Hau - Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia Hau is a young, big-hearted boy that quickly becomes the player 's friend as soon as they move to the Alola region At the start of the story, the Pokémon loving boy is often laidback and enjoys Pokémon battles for fun, but over the course of his island challenge, he begins to feel more serious
Division of Forestry and Wildlife: Forestry Program | Hau Hau is recognizable by its large and bight yellow flowers containing a dark red “eye spot” inside It is a part of the Malvaceae family Hau grows to heights of 4 to 10 m (13 to 33 ft) with a trunk up to 15 cm (5 9 in) in diameter (Little and Roger, 1989)
Hau - Wikipedia Look up Hau, hau, or -hau in Wiktionary, the free dictionary
HAU The HAU Network of Ethnographic Theory (HAU-N E T ) is an international network of research centers, libraries, and anthropology departments working together to support HAU, to champion open access publishing, and to shift how we think about and shape anthropology as a global discipline
Hau (Hibiscus tileaceus) - Maui Nui Botanical Gardens Notes: Hau is an amazingly useful plant Its fibers were made into cordage (rope), which was used in almost every facet of life in early Hawai‘i The light wood was fashioned into spars for outrigger canoes and floats for fishnets Hau, along with olomea, was also useful in igniting fire
Hau | Pokémon Wiki | Fandom Hau is character first appearing in Pokémon Sun and Pokémon Moon, as one of the main rivals of the games Hau is a dark-skinned boy, with dark green hair, which is tied into a short ponytail with an orange band
hau — Wehe²wiki² Hawaiian Language Dictionaries Name of the land breeze that blows at night; hence, any cool breeze; he hau kekahi makani mauka mai, un manao ia mai loko mai o ke kuahiwi kela makani NOTE —This word has several forms
Hau: More Than a Pretty Bloom — A Canoe Plant of Hawaiʻi Hau is a canoe plant, brought to Hawaiʻi by our ancestors because of its value—not just for beauty, but for survival Its flowers bloom bright yellow in the morning, turning deep orange by late afternoon, with a crimson heart at the center
Hau - Manoa Heritage Center Hau cordage (ʻili hau) is made from the inner bark while flowers are used for laxative properties Hau is seen as the visible form of Mānoa wind The tree is sacred, its legendary genealogy leading directly back to the great gods of Polynesia
Bishop Museum - Ethnobotany Database Papala or hau wood was cut, thoroughly dried, and carried up the hillside to where an imu lay ready to be lighted When dusk desended, the imu was lighted and the logs placed in it