The Head of State is TuiAtua Tupua Tamasese Efi Meaole, and the Prime Minister is Tuilaepa Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi
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The Head of State is TuiAtua Tupua Tamasese. The Samoan Prime Minister is Tuilaepa Lupesoliai Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi.
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The current Head of State in Samoa is Tui Atua Tupua Tamasese. After Malietoa Tanumafili II passed in 2007.
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The Samoan last Head of State was Malietoa Tanumafili. The present Head of State is TuiAtua Tupua (King) Tamasese Efi Meaole.
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The Head of State is TuiAtua Tupua Tamasese Efi Meaole. The Samoan Prime Minister is Tuilaepe Lupesoliai Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi.
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Tuiatua Tupua Tamasese Efi was elected head of state by the legislature on the 17 June 2007 for a 5-year term.
Tuilaepa Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi is the Prime Minister of Samoa
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The Samoan current Head of State and his beautiful wife as of 16 July 2012 are: Tui-Atua (King) Tupua Tamasese Efi Meaole and Masiofo (Queen) Filifilia.
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Tuiatua Tupua Tamasese Efi was elected head of state by the legislature on the 17 June 2007 for a 5-year term.
Tuilaepa Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi is the Prime Minister of Samoa
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That's an easy thing.
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You can say "ʻAʻole pilikia" in Hawaiian to mean "you are welcome."
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In Hawaiian, "you're welcome" is typically expressed as "e' oli'oli."
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You can say "e 'olu'olu" in Hawaiian to mean "you're welcome."
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I never heard of anyone using "heahea", but just 'a'ole pilikia would suffice, or even he mea 'ole.
Welcome Heahea. There is no equivalent. one may say "komo mai". You are welcome, he mea 'ole No, "[e] komo mai" means "welcome", as in come in and make yourself at home. You don't say 'komo mai' in response to thank you.
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Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn.
Re vera, cara mea, mea nil refert.
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A literal translation would be mea familia, mea vita
If you mean "my family is my life", then you can say mea familia est mea vita
Alternatively you could say mea familia est vita mihi.
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Loving You - Ole Ole Ole - was created on 2001-10-15.
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Of course there is the most common word that most people know, ha`ole usually pronounced as howlee or howleh depending on who you talk to, but it's most literal translation does not mean white man at all. In fact it means "out of breath" or "without breath". Here is something important to know, "He mea `ole i ka lāhui iā `oe, `õlelo nā mea āpau e pili ana `oe i kō hana." It means, "It does not matter the race you come from, your actions speak everything about you."
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The event known as Black Saturday was the shooting of Samoans connected to the Mau, a movement for a free Samoa, on 28 December 1929. New Zealand colonial police, engaged in suppression of a demonstration by members of the group, fired into a crowd throwing rocks, killing Mau leader Tupua Tamasese Lealofi III and 10 others. This was followed by an incursion by New Zealand marines in 1930. It was not until the 1936 elections that New Zealand public opinion turned in favor of Samoan independence, which came in 1962.
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The motto of Francesco Camaldo is 'Mater Mea Fiducia Mea'.
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YES THE CARNIVAL CRUISE LINE COMMERICAL
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mea tuck is excited because she loves tuck
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OLE OLE OLE OLE shameless
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