Linguists have reconstructed the term to
Proto-
Nuclear Polynesian *sawaiki. The
Māori word figures in traditions about the arrival of the Māori in
Aotearoa, present day
New Zealand. The same concept appears in other Polynesian cultures, the name appearing variously as
Havaiki,
Havaii, or
Avaiki in other
Polynesian languages.
Hawaiki or the misspelling "Hawaiiki" appear to have become the most common variants used in
English. Although the
Samoans have preserved no traditions of having originated elsewhere, the name of the largest Samoan island preserves a
cognate with the word
Hawaiki, as does the name of the Polynesian islands of (the denoting a
glottal stop that replaces the "k" in some Polynesian languages). On several island groups, including New Zealand and the
Marquesas, the term has been recorded as associated with the mythical
underworld and death. Gill (1876:155) records a proverb:
Ua po Avaiki, ua ao nunga nei – 'Tis night now in spirit-land, for 'tis light in this upper world." Tregear (1891:392) also records the term Avaiki as meaning "
underworld" at Mangaia, probably sourced from Gill. The proposed origin of Hawaiki being both the ancestral homeland and the underworld is that both are the dwelling places of ancestors and the spirits. Other possible cognates of the word
Hawaiki include ("spirits" in
Samoan) and ("chiefs" in
Tongan). This has led some scholars to hypothesize that the word
Hawaiki, and, by extension, and , may not, in fact, have originally referred to a geographical place, but rather to
chiefly ancestors and the chief-based social structure that pre-colonial Polynesia typically exhibited. On
Easter Island, the name of the home country in oral tradition appears as . According to
Thor Heyerdahl, was said to lie east of the island.
Sebastian Englert records: : : Translation: "The island towards the sun, above! Go, see the island where King
Hotu Matua will go and live!" Englert puts forward the claim that lies to the West of the island. The name is found in the
Marquesas Islands, in the names of several islands: , and (although in the element may be a different word, ). It is also notable that in the
Hawaiian Islands, the ancestral homeland is called , a cognate of
Tahiti, where at least part of the Hawaiian population came from. == Legends ==