Hawaiian Word of the Year: Kāhuli

Chosen as the 2025 Hawaiian Word of the Year by the University of Hawai‘i at Hilo Ka Haka ‘Ula o Ke‘elikōlani College of Hawaiian Language, kāhuli speaks to fundamental transformation, “not surface change, but the kind of shift that reorders everything.”

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Stephanie Salmons

December 25, 20253 min read

Sunset at Ala Moana Regional Park in September 2025.
Sunset at Ala Moana Regional Park (Stephanie Salmons | Aloha State Daily)

You’ll find the word “kāhuli” in the first lines of the Kumulipo, the Hawaiian creation chant.

Meaning to change, to alter, to overturn, kāhuli — pronounced KAH-hoo-lee — has been chosen by the University of Hawai‘i at Hilo Ka Haka ‘Ula o Ke‘elikōlani College of Hawaiian Language as the 2025 Hawaiian word, of the year.

“In the Kumulipo, kāhuli describes the transformation that warmed the earth and unfolded the heavens, catalyzing the formation of the universe itself,” UH said in a recent announcement.

Ka‘iu Kimura, director of the Hawaiian language college, said in the announcement that kāhuli speaks to fundamental transformation, “not surface change, but the kind of shift that reorders everything.”

Kaʻiu Kimura, director of Ka Haka ʻUla O Keʻelikōlani College of Hawaiian Language at the University of Hawai‘i at Hilo.
Kaʻiu Kimura, director of Ka Haka ʻUla O Keʻelikōlani College of Hawaiian Language at the University of Hawai‘i at Hilo. (University of Hawai‘i at Hilo)

"This meaning resonates as we navigate change on multiple fronts: federal shutdowns affecting vulnerable ‘ohana, rising costs reshaping island economies, climate disasters whose recovery continues across our communities. Political movements challenge unjust systems globally, while our communities grapple with the cost of simply remaining home,” the announcement notes.

“The word kāhuli acknowledges that transformation can feel disruptive, but it’s also how new worlds emerge," Kimura says. “We're living through an era of kāhuli politically, environmentally and culturally.”

In an emailed response to questions, Kimura told Aloha State Daily that this is the second year that Ka Haka ‘Ula o Ke‘elikōlani has selected a Hawaiian word of the year.

“The ultimate goal is to normalize the usage of ʻŌlelo Hawai‘i (Hawaiian language) which is the mother tongue of these Islands,” she says.

The 2024 Hawaiian Word of the Year was mākia, which means "aim, motto or purpose."

According to Kimura, the selection is a collaborative effort between Ka Haka ‘Ula o Ke‘elikōlani and UH Hilo’s university relations, which has staff members who are graduates of the Hawaiian language college and are fluent speakers themselves.

“They bring both communications expertise and deep grounding in ʻŌlelo Hawai‘i to the process,” she says. “This allows us to root the selection in the college’s scholarly work and language expertise while also ensuring the word speaks meaningfully to contemporary experiences and can be communicated effectively to diverse audiences.”

The process of selecting a word takes several weeks, as they reflect on the year, discuss potential words and their layered meanings, and “carefully craft the framing in both Hawaiian and English,” Kimura notes.

“The selection process is both reflective and intentional. We consider major developments and experiences over the past year—globally, nationally, and especially locally for our Hawai‘i ‘ohana and communities,” Kimura says. “Our focus is on examining these experiences through a Hawaiian lens: What do our Hawaiian perspectives, practices, traditions, and understandings — informed by our ʻŌlelo Hawai‘i — reveal about what we’ve experienced? How can our language help us frame, understand, and learn from these events in ways that honor both our traditions and our current realities?

“It’s important that the word we choose resonates across audiences — with fluent speakers and non-speakers alike,” she continued. “This means the English expression isn’t always a direct translation, because sometimes there isn’t one that fully captures the depth of the Hawaiian concept. Instead, we work to ensure the English conveys the same depth and significance as the Hawaiian, even if the words themselves differ. This takes time and careful consideration to get right.”

(And ICYMI: UH Hilo professor of Hawaiian language and Hawaiian studies Larry Kimura, who happens to be Ka‘iu Kimura's uncle, is often called the godfather of the Hawaiian language revitalization movement. Read more about Larry Kimura and his work to perpetuate the Hawaiian language here).

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Stephanie Salmons can be reached at stephanie@alohastatedaily.com.

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Stephanie Salmons

Senior Reporter

Stephanie Salmons is Senior Reporter for Aloha State Daily covering business, tourism, the economy, real estate and development and general news.