different between kanaka vs kabaka

kanaka

English

Alternative forms

  • Kanaka

Etymology

1840. From Hawaiian kanaka (person), ultimately from Proto-Polynesian *ta?ata.

Noun

kanaka (plural kanakas)

  1. A person of Hawaiian descent.
    • 2010, Mike Farris, Kanaka Blues, Savant Books and Publications, page 21,
      "Who was the call from?"
      "I don't know. Sound like a kanaka though.” When Erin frowned, he added, “A Hawaiian, like me.”
  2. (historical) A South Pacific Islander, especially a labourer in Australia or Canada.
    • 1921, W. Somerset Maugham, "Red", The Trembling of a Leaf: Little Stories of the South Sea Islands, 2011, The Floating Press, page 47,
      The Kanaka at the wheel gave him a glance, but did not speak.
    • 1933, Cambridge History of the British Empire, Part I, Volume VII, Cambridge University Press, Reissued 1988, Ernest Scott (editor), Australia, Volume 1, Cambridge University Press, page 313,
      So long as the Kanakas remained, white labour in Queensland went into the mills, from which the Kanakas were excluded, rather than into the cane brakes. Slowly, however, the change proceeded. [] The gentleman planter, owning broad estates worked by Kanaka gangs, crushing and refining his own sugar after a fashion in the plantation mill, was by that time obsolescent. Though the small farmers into whose hands the plantations were divided might employ a Kanaka or two, no Kanaka might own land.

Descendants

  • ? French: canaque
    • ? English: Kanak

Translations

See also

  • Canaque
  • Canuck
  • Kanak
  • Kanake (German)

Hawaiian

Etymology

From Proto-Polynesian *ta?ata

Noun

kanaka (irregular plural k?naka)

  1. human being
  2. subject, retainer
  3. a Hawaiian

Descendants

  • ? English: kanaka
    • ? French: canaque
      • ? English: Kanak

Javanese

Alternative forms

  • Carakan: ???
  • Roman: kanoko (nonstandard)

Noun

kanaka (krama-ngoko kuku, krama inggil kanaka)

  1. (anatomy) Krama inggil of kuku.

References

  • "kanaka" in Tim Balai Bahasa Yogyakarta, Kamus Basa Jawa (Bausastra Jawa). Kanisius, Yogyakarta

Tok Pisin

Etymology

Probably from German Kanake (see other entries on this page for more).

Noun

kanaka

  1. aborigine; native; tribesman

Derived terms

  • bus kanaka/buskanaka

See also

  • tokples

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kabaka

English

Etymology

From Luganda akabaka.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /k??b??k?/

Noun

kabaka (plural kabakas)

  1. The title of the king of Buganda.
    • 2009, Diarmaid MacCulloch, A History of Christianity, Penguin 2010, p. 886:
      In the end, Buganda's identification between Crown and Church was so great that when in 1953 the British Governor of Uganda exiled the Kabaka of Buganda for political reasons, the Mothers' Union of the Anglican Church was loud among the chorus of furious protest.

kabaka From the web:

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