Around the year 1300 AD, seven boats containing the Māori people left their home in Rangeātia, Tahiti and travelled to Aotearoa (literally, the land of the long white cloud, and later called New Zealand). Six boats settled in the North Island and one in the South Island. The Māori people were warriors, and are known for the haka (performed internationally by New Zealand rugby teams), poi dancing, tattoos, carving, and weaving.
In written Māori there are 5 vowels: a, e, i, o, u 10 consonants/diagraphs: p, t, k, m, n, ng, wh, h, w, r
- Short vowels are pronounced as /a, e, i, ɔ, u/
- Long vowels are indicated with a macron: ā, ē, ī, ō, ū
- Long and short vowels are phonemic. For example, keke (cake), kekē (creak), kēkē (armpit).
- The consonant ‘t’ sounds like /t/ before the vowels i and u, but /d/ before the vowels a, e, o
- ‘wh’ is pronounced as ‘f’(or possibly a bilabial fricative, such as found in Japanese)
- ‘r’ is a tap/flap, but there are dialectal differences
- kia ora (welcome)
- tēnā koe (hello to one person), tēnā kōrua (hello to two people), tēnā koutou (hello to three or more people)
- tēnā koe (thankyou to one person), tēnā kōrua (thankyou to two people), tēnā koutou (thankyou to three or more people)
- Ui mai koe ki ahau he aha te mea nui o te ao, Māku e kī atu he tangata, he tangata, he tangata! (Ask me what is the greatest thing in the world, I will reply: It is people, it is people, it is people)
Sources:
Staff and information at the Te Puia Māori Cultural Centre, RotoruaNiwa, H. (2009). Pronounce Māori with confidence. Auckland: Reed Publishing.
Reed, A. W. (2001) The Reed concise Māori dictionary (6th ed). Auckland: Reed Publishing.