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#165781 02/07/07 03:04 AM
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Jackie Offline OP
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Waitangi or Waitingi, please? I'm seeing one but remembering the other...I think.

#165782 02/07/07 03:38 AM
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Quote:

Waitangi or Waitingi, please? I'm seeing one but remembering the other...I think.




Waitangi - weeping waters, buckets of tears, sobfest, etc. etc. The most common modern translation is "day off".

#165783 02/07/07 01:14 PM
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Jackie Offline OP
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Dang it--I tried to look up the Maaori translation for thank you, but kept getting kia ora, which I thought was generally used as hello/good wishes.

"day off". Same here, for some of our holidays.

#165784 02/07/07 06:10 PM
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Quote:

Dang it--I tried to look up the Maaori translation for thank you, but kept getting kia ora, which I thought was generally used as hello/good wishes.

"day off". Same here, for some of our holidays.




"Kia ora" is the standard, and to all practical intent the only, Maaori expression for "thank you".

#165785 02/07/07 07:57 PM
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old hand
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Quote:

I thought was generally used as hello/good wishes.




Kia ora literally means to 'have life'. alluding to good health. Appropriate when greeting and thanking.
May I ask why the interest in Waitangi day?

Also, if you don't have this: ngata dictionary

You probably know this one sjmaxq:
comparative
Naku noa na Olly

#165786 02/07/07 08:54 PM
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Quote:

Quote:

I thought was generally used as hello/good wishes.




Kia ora literally means to 'have life'. alluding to good health. Appropriate when greeting and thanking.
May I ask why the interest in Waitangi day?

Also, if you don't have this: ngata dictionary

You probably know this one sjmaxq:
comparative
Naku noa na Olly




No, I didn't have that one. I might have to create a little NZ-specific section on my list, since the page currently is almost all about English, and its IE cousins.

#165787 02/08/07 02:39 AM
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Jackie Offline OP
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why the interest Er--because of the date.

Kia ora literally means to 'have life'. Thank you.


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