- take tikanga tangata
- Maori for anthropology
Maori-English dictionary. 2008.
Maori-English dictionary. 2008.
Māori people — For the Māori people of the Cook Islands, see Cook Islanders. Māori … Wikipedia
Māori culture — Wharenui, Ohinemutu village, Rotorua. Māori culture is the culture of the Māori of New Zealand, an Eastern Polynesian people, and forms a distinctive part of New Zealand culture. Within the Māori community, and to a lesser extent throughout New… … Wikipedia
Musket Wars — The Musket Wars were a series of five hundred or more battles mainly fought between various hapū (subtribes a group of about 200 400 people), sometimes alliances of pan hapū groups and less often larger iwi (tribal groups) of Māori between 1807… … Wikipedia
Marae — Taputapuātea, an ancient marae constructed of stone on Ra iātea in the Society Islands, restored in 1994. A marae (in New Zealand Māori, Cook Islands Māori, Tahitian) malaʻe (in Tongan), malae (in Samoan and Hawaiian … Wikipedia
Pā (Māori) — Terraces on Mt Eden, Auckland, marking the sites of the defensive palisades and ditches of this former pā. The word pā (IPA paː) can refer to any Māori village or settlement, but in traditional use it referred to hillforts fortified with… … Wikipedia
New Zealand wars — New Zealand Land Wars Memorial in the Auckland War Memorial Museum for those who died, both European and Māori, in the New Zealand Wars. Kia mate toa can be translated as fight unto death or be strong in death , and is the motto of the … Wikipedia
New Zealand Public Service Association — PSA Full name New Zealand Public Service Association Founded 1913 Members 59,000 Country New Zealand Affiliation NZCTU … Wikipedia
Whakapapa — This article is about Māori genealogy. For the Whakapapa skifield in New Zealand, see Whakapapa skifield. Whakapapa (Maori pronunciation: [ˈɸakaˌpapa]), or genealogy, is a fundamental principle that permeates the whole of Māori culture.… … Wikipedia
Māori politics — New Zealand This article is part of the series: Politics and government of New Zealand Constitution … Wikipedia
Ngāti Kahu — Iwi of New Zealand Rohe (location) Northland Region Waka (canoe) Mamaru … Wikipedia
New Zealand land confiscations — The New Zealand land confiscations took place during the 1860s to punish the Kingitanga movement for attempting to set up an alternative, Māori, form of government that forbade the selling of land. The confiscation law targeted Kingitanga Māori… … Wikipedia