curprev06:5106:51, 20 February 2024 62.73.69.121talk 69,376 bytes+74 →Monophthongs: It is important to note that, as the Parker Jones article specifies, this is the phonetics of the variety resulting from revitalisation, after a period without transmission as a native language.undo
curprev20:3620:36, 22 July 2023 Peaceraytalkcontribs 69,467 bytes+127 Moved items from Sources section that were not being used for {{sfn}}, put them in a Further reading section, & added "| ref=none"undo
curprev21:5721:57, 10 July 2023 Warrenmcktalkcontribs 69,328 bytes+151 Added explanation for k - t variation in Hawaiian phonology as a footnote to the table. Removed citation needed from the k -> ʔ per WP:BLUESKY, as the k -> ʔ change is one of the more noted features of Hawaiian and several related languages and can be found in the word "Hawaiʻi" *c.f. Proto-Polynesian *Sawaiki. This sound change will inevitable be cited in the sources for this article, as well. →Consonantsundo
curprev15:3315:33, 23 January 2023 A455bcd9talkcontribs 69,192 bytes+9 "Today, the number of native speakers of Hawaiian, which was under 0.1% of the statewide population in 1997, has risen to 2,000, out of 24,000 total who are fluent in the language, according to the US 2011 census." (in the article)undoTag: 2017 wikitext editor
curprev12:1812:18, 22 May 2022 Austronesiertalkcontribs 67,644 bytes−10,234 No, the genetic history of the Hawaiian language is *not* demonstrated primarily through the application of lexicostatistics. Also, the table has been significantly altered (e.g. dates removed) and inflated, and as a result doesn't match the text at all. Since much of this is OR and gives undue weight to a largely discarded method, WP:TNT is the best solution here.undo
curprev20:1520:15, 13 May 2022 Vbscript2talkcontribs 77,422 bytes−477 Removed erroneous information in lede about Hawaiian National Park Language Correction Act of 2000, which never became law.undo
curprev01:4401:44, 20 July 2021 Calquelatortalkcontribs 77,204 bytes+4 Replaced "abjad" with "abugida"; although Isaac Meyer's "Nā hōʻailona ʻōlelo" was in fact inspired by the Phoenician writing system, Meyer's writing system is in fact not an abjad, as is stated in the Omniglot article.undo