Hawaii (U.S. state): Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>John Stephenson
imported>Drew R. Smith
Line 31: Line 31:
The Friendly Island
The Friendly Island
===Niihau===
===Niihau===
Island of Yesterday
The Forbidden Island


Privately owned.
Privately owned.
===Oahu===
===Oahu===
The Gathering Place.
The Gathering Place.

Revision as of 21:05, 6 July 2009

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
Catalogs [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

Hawaii is a state of the United States of America consisting of an archipelago in the Pacific Ocean. Hawaii became the 50th state to join the USA on August 21, 1959. It was previously an independent Polynesian kingdom until its monarchy was overthrown in 1893, and the territory annexed by the USA in 1898.

Map of main Hawaiian islands

State facts and trivia

State flower of Hawaii - Yellow Hibiscus

State bird: Nene (Hawaiian goose)

State tree: Kukui (Candlenut)

History

Geography

Islands

Hawaii

The Big Island

The largest island in the achipelago.

Kaho'olawe

The smallest of the 8 main islands in the archipelago. Uninhabited.

Kauai

The Garden Island

Lanai

The Pineapple Island

Maui

The Valley Island

Molokai

The Friendly Island

Niihau

The Forbidden Island

Privately owned.

Oahu

The Gathering Place.

The seat of state government with the capital city Honolulu.

Language

English and Hawaiian, a Polynesian language, are official in Hawaii. Reflecting high immigration in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, several other languages have been or continue to be spoken, including Japanese, Filipino and various Chinese varieties. Many of these immigrant languages were brought from East and South-East Asia and the needs for speakers of diverse language backgrounds to communicate led to the development of Pidgin Hawaiian, a fairly rudimentary pidgin language drawing much of its vocabulary from Hawaiian, but with many languages contributing to its formation. In the 1890s and afterwards, the increased spread of English favored the use of an English-based pidgin instead, which, once nativized as the first language of children, developed into a creole which today is misleadingly called Hawaiian 'Pidgin'.

See also

U.S. States and Territories

References