OMGosh! I miss Waikiki beach so much...🙁 Thank you for sharing this video. 👍🇨🇦😊
@HawaiiTravel3 жыл бұрын
Mahalo for watching! Waikiki beach misses you!
@catchapass2Success3 жыл бұрын
My Hawaii will always be here to stay in my heart no matter how many miles away I am.
@HawaiiTravel3 жыл бұрын
Aloha Laurie! I love that. Same :)
@larryedwards70643 жыл бұрын
Always beautiful. I lived there 18 years and also miss it greatly. But an English lesson for you! Nothing is 'notoriously' beautiful. Notorious is a word giving recognition to something or someone really bad. Al Capone was a notorious criminal. Jack Lord was a FAMOUS actor. Once again - 'fame' and 'famous' for something good - including sunsets! 'Notoriety' and 'notorious' for something heinous! You never saw this egregious error 50 years ago. Now you see it all the time, unfortunately.
@HawaiiTravel3 жыл бұрын
Aloha Larry! Thanks, I never knew that. Like you said, I see people using it improperly all the time so had no clue. Lol!
@larryedwards70643 жыл бұрын
@@HawaiiTravel Glad to help. I think a lot of the blame for this goes on news media (saddens me because I was a journalist in my early years - I was a sportswriter in Honolulu for first the Advertiser and then the Star-Bulletin for seven years), both print and broadcast. Drives me up the wall how many serious grammatical errors they make these days over and over, and I think people pick it up from them, assuming that as 'professionals' they must be right. They are lazy and don't do their homework before they go on air - unlike in my day. I always speak of Al Michaels, with whom I spent many hours in in the pressbox in the old Honolulu Stadium and at high school fields all over Oahu, as the perfect example of being a professional (at the age of 22!) in doing his homework so he always pronounced the many ethnic names of the players right. Nowadays even major league baseball announcers frequently mispronounce the names of players on the teams they cover every day! Then there is the frequent misuse of the term 'out of sorts' which is NOT synonymous with 'out of sync' (it means 'irritated' or 'disgruntled'), 'scuffle' which does NOT mean 'struggle' (it means get in a half-hearted fight). And the most frequent boo-boo of all for sportswriters - say someone was 'unphased' when the correct term is 'unfazed'. Aloha nui.