Marekeiso, lehn kalangi, kei, and leh
Marekeiso is the term used when putting/applying coconut oil on the     Nahnmwariki’s body only. For everyone else, Pohnpeians use the word     kei. Leh is oil, the generic phrase for coconut oil. Kei refers to     oil applied to a human body. Lehn kalangi is the name of the first     leh or oil and/or the initial oiling of the Nahnmwariki’s body right     after the 4th serving (cup/ngarangar) of the first sakau (ahmwadang)     is presented. The second time oil is called for and applied the oil     is referred to as marekeiso. Lehn kalangi and marekeiso are employed     only with the presence of the Nahnmwariki. To use the terms lehn     kalangi or marekeiso in other contexts is culturally improper. When     the menindei calls "ansouhn lehn kalangi," he is calling for first     oiling of the king. Put another way, if one calls coconut oil     "marekeiso" and then applies that oil to a person, one is     effectively acknowledging that the person is their Nahnmwarki. Sources for this information include Professor Robert Andreas, the students in the ethnobotany class, and other sources.
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