pahoehoe
[ pah-hoh-ey-hoh-ey, puh-hoh-ee-hoh-ee ]
/ pɑˈhoʊ eɪˌhoʊ eɪ, pəˈhoʊ iˌhoʊ i /
noun
basaltic lava having a smooth or billowy surface.
Compare
aa.
Origin of pahoehoe
First recorded in 1855–60,
pahoehoe is from the Hawaiian word
pāhoehoe
Words nearby pahoehoe
Example sentences from the Web for pahoehoe
She will fill up your fishing grounds with the pahoehoe (lava), and you will starve.
The Book of Missionary Heroes |Basil MathewsPahoehoe: The sterile, flintlike lava as distinguished from aa, the friable and highly fertile lava.
Legends of Wailuku |Charlotte HapaiKe-au-miki stood looking for a path, but could only see what seemed to be pahoehoe lava.
Legends of Gods and Ghosts (Hawaiian Mythology) |W. D. (William Drake) Westervelt
Scientific definitions for pahoehoe
pahoehoe
[ pə-hoi′hoi′ ]
A type of lava having a smooth, swirled surface. It is highly fluid and spreads out in shiny sheets. Compare aa.
Word History
The islands that make up Hawaii were born and bred from volcanoes that rose up over thousands of years from the sea floor. Volcanoes are such an important part of the Hawaiian landscape and environment that the people who originally settled Hawaii, the Polynesians, worshiped a special volcano goddess, Pele. Not surprisingly, two words have entered English from Hawaiian that are used by scientists in naming different kinds of lava flows. One, pahoehoe, refers to lava with a smooth, shiny, or swirled surface and comes from the Hawaiian verb hoe, to paddle (since paddles make swirls in the water). The other, aa, refers to lava having a rough surface and comes from the Hawaiian word meaning to burn.