100 everyday phrases for beginners to increase vocabulary Check out the website @ www.learningmaori.co.nz Trying to build content that would be helpful for beginner/intermediate learners drive.google.c...
I listened, paused and tried to guess what it would be i te reo māori while sitting in traffic on the way to mahi I tēnei ata. Loved it. Please do more.
@@learningmaori711 yesterday I did it by myself. Today my teen got involved on his own on the way to kura. I got 2 more right today and have started to use more kupu in my job and I shared your video with my colleagues
As a Japanese Maori language sounds just like our mother tongue. I'm familiar with most of the sounds. (probably except for "ng" for non-English speakers.) What an interesting language!
@@karuno8247 You've been to Japan? Reading an article of wikipedia, I thought the reverse doesn't seem to be the case. (Maori has fewer consonants than Japanese) But bilinguals of both English and Maori would probably be able to pronounce Japanese quite easily. Interestingly both languages have distinctions between long and short vowels. And in Maori R can be replaced as L just like Japanese ラ(ra)
🥝~ Timestamps ~🥝 0:05 "Could you bring me a pillow and a blanket, please?" 0:28 "My father made me wash the car." 0:52 "I had breakfast at 7-30 in the morning." 1:21 "Shut your mouth" 1:33 "The boy ran away." 1:47 "His answer is different from mine." 2:05 "She runs faster than I do." 2:23 "We live near a big library." 2:50 "He loves her." 3:07 "What's in the box?" 3:20 "What did you eat for breakfast?" 3:37 "Is this your first trip abroad?" 3:56 "This is their house." 4:10 "He came back from Auckland." 4:31 "This blouse is cotton." 4:45 "Our children like dogs but I prefer cats." 5:17 "The building was built in 1960." 5:44 "What time is it?" 5:59 "Are you working?" 6:12 "She got up at 7 in the morning." 6:31 "Those books are mine." 6:48 "She adores cats" 7:05 "My father smokes." 7:21 "This is a very old book." 7:39 "I'm so happy." 7:52 "I am tired of reading." 8:09 "By the way, where are you from?" 8:25 "It's up to you" 8:41 "Who will look after your dog?" 8:59 "Some boys came into the classroom" Thanks so much for this video! 💚
Keep asking duolingo and memrise and the other popular language apps to include maori. The more they are asked the more they will be aware of the need.
Thanls for the video I have subscribed. Couldnt find Ngāturu in the dictionary. But i know Ngāruru. (To be affected by) Is it a local dialect difference? Or just a typo.
At 24 minutes - Pakeha is not the English language. The English Language is the English Language. Pakeha is a word give to the early white settlers (many of those were American)
Just for pronunciation bro the t is like a hard d before e, a, and o. Before i and u, the t is almost like the zz in pizza. For au you open your mouth into the a sound a bit more too, it’s not just like the kiwi english ‘oh’.
He patai taku mō te rerenga "she adores cats" "e rawe ana ki a ia te ngeru.. (kei te ako au i te reo māori nā reira, ka pirangi au ki te mohio) he aha ai i "te ngeru", kāore "ngā ngeru" nā te mea he plural? .. engari i mohio ahau te tikanga mō tamariki i te tū anake ki te plural na reira rite tonu "ngā tamariki ki "te tamariki.. ?.
@@learningmaori711 Nōku te hē. I te mahi ahau i ngā mahi e rua inanahi, ā, e mahia ana te mea tuarua te kupu wharekai. He tika tāu rerenga kōrero. He pātai anō nāku. Kei te ngaro ētahi o ngā tohutō. He pai ki a koe māku ngā mea e tuku?
@@karenkennedy6536 Mēnā ka pirangi tonu koe ki te āwhina, ka pai te īmēratia e koe ki admin@manaproject.co.nz kia whakangāwari ai taku hoatu ki a koe te tuhinga?