june, 2019

2019thu27jun8:00 am5:30 pmSTEMS2 Symposium8:00 am - 5:30 pm Kamakakuokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies, Dole Street Event Organized By: University of Hawaii at Manoa

more

Event Details

STEMS2 Symposium

Aloha kākou! Hawaiʻi Museums Association is excited to share information on this upcoming event hosted by the University of Hawaiʻiʻs College of Education. The 1st annual STEMS2 Symposium will be held on June 27, 2019. The event will feature presentations and workshops hosted by students in the program. Hawaiʻi Museums Association will also be in attendance by hosting a table at the event.

Please be sure to sign up for this free symposium! For more information, contact Tara OʻNeill at toneill@hawaii.edu or by calling 808-956-0415.

We hope to see you there!

Time

(Thursday) 8:00 am - 5:30 pm

Location

Kamakakuokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies

Dole Street

Organizer

University of Hawaii at Manoatoneill@hawaii.edu

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

EXPLANATION OF HAWAIIAN LANGUAGE

Written Hawaiian uses two diacritical markings as pronunciation guides:

  • The ‘okina, which is typographically represented as a reversed apostrophe. In spoken Hawaiian, the ‘okina indicates a glottal stop, or clean break between vowels. If your browser supports this display (and it may not, depending on browser type and settings), an ‘okina should look like this: ‘. If browsing conditions do not support this display, you might be seeing a box, a blank space, or odd-looking character instead.
  • The kahako, or macron, which is typographically represented as a bar above the letter, as in ā (again, you will see it correctly only if your browser delivers it correctly). The macron on a vowel indicates increased duration in pronunciation of the vowel that it appears over.

Web browsers sometimes have difficulty reproducing these markings without the use of graphics, special fonts, or special coding. Even correctly authored Web pages that use Unicode coding may be transmitted through a server that displays the symbols incorrectly or the browser may use a replacement font that displays these incorrectly.

Since most browsers can and do display the ASCII grave symbol (‘) as coded, this site uses the grave symbol to represent the ‘okina. We do depict the correct ‘okina on all pages in the title graphic because it is embedded in the graphic and not displayed as text.

The kahako/macron is more problematic. Given the problems with displaying this with current technology, some websites resort to displaying these with diaeresis characters instead, as in ä, which will appear in most browsers (but not all) as an “a” with two dots over it. However, this is not a desirable solution because it doesn’t work uniformly in all browser situations. Until Unicode fonts are more universally displayable, the site reluctantly omits the kahako from most text.

For up-to-date information on how to display the Hawaiian language on websites, visit http://www.olelo.hawaii.edu/enehana/unicode.php by the Kualono Hawaiian Language Center of the University of Hawaii. General information on these issues can also be found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E2%80%98Okina and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macron.

X