This is so interesting, thank you! I'm learning some vocabulary but don't really know how to form any sentences so this has taught me a lot. I tried doing the same with Irish and you can do a similiar table for the regular verbs. I'm wondering though, are there other forms of the verbs in Te Reo too? For example in Irish you can say "I am running (táim ag rith), I was running (bhí mé ag rith), I will be running (beidh mé ag rith)", but you can also say "I ran (rith mé), I will run (rithfidh mé)". Tēnā koe!
It's interesting how Polynesian languages generally keep the same starting letter as earlier Austronesian languages but then change everything else Te Reo Māori - I Fino' Chamorro - English Haere - Hanao - Go Moe - Maigo - Sleep Tū - Togi - Stand Tangi - Tanges - Cry
"Ia" same meaning like Indonesian language, but in indonesia many type "ia" "dia" it's same meaning (her/him no gender). "Koe" means "you" in Javanese ngoko (informal)