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Idioms

Phrases

Proverbs

Loan words

Historical loan words

-kina

1. (particle) A passive ending.

(Te Kākano Textbook (Ed. 2): 65-67, 84-85;)

Wetekina ngā here o ōna hū. / Untie her shoelaces please.

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kina

1. (noun) sea egg, common sea urchin, Evechinus chloroticus - a marine echinoderm which has a spherical or flattened shell covered in mobile spines with a mouth on the underside. Lives under rock ledges below low tide. Covered with long, sharp brown spines and feeds on seaweed.

Kakū ana tana ngao i ngā kai papai a te Pākehā, engari ko tēhea atu hoki i te kānga kōpiro, i te toroī, i te kōura mara, i te kina i rāua ki te wai māori mō ngā rā e toru, i te kōuka, i te mangō me te kererū huahua, he mea kōtutu katoa i roto anō i ōna hinu (TTR 1998:206). / He enjoyed the finest of Pākehā foods but relished fermented corn, pickled pūhā and mussels, crayfish fermented in fresh water, sea-urchins steeped in fresh water for three days, inner baby fronds of the cabbage tree, shark, and wild pigeons preserved entirely in their own fat.

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See also kina ariki

Synonyms: pūrau

kina taratara

1. (noun) Goniocidaris umbraculum - a deep water species of kina. Notable for its disparity in the form of its spines.

kina poka

1. (noun) Echinobrissus recens - smaller but similar to kina pākira.

kina pākira

1. (noun) heart urchin, Echinocardium australe - abundant around Aotearoa/New Zealand coasts. Lives buried in soft mud below low tide to depths of 30 m. Shell is covered with fine curved glistening greenish-grey spines.

kina ariki

1. (noun) a variety of sea egg with very long spikes.

kina papa

1. (noun) cake urchin, snapper biscuit, Fellaster zelandiae - common in sand near the entrance to harbours from low water to a few meters in depth. A hard limy disc up to 100 mm in diameter, flat on the lower side and slightly convex above covered in short mossy-green spines.

ateate

1. (noun) calf (of the leg).

Ka tau te tangata rā ki ngā waewae, ka mau ki tōna pukepoto, ka pania ki ngā ateate o ngā waewae o Warea (JPS 1914:2). / That man felt for her legs, and taking a piece of blue clay painted the calves of Warea's legs.

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2. (noun) roe of the kina (Evechinus chloroticus).

Kei te koko i ngā ateate ki te ipu (PK 2008:39). / Scooping out the kina roe into a container.

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pīmuri whakahāngū

1. (noun) passive suffix, passive ending - endings added to a verb that is used when the subject undergoes the action of the verb. In Māori, verbs used in the passive usually take a passive ending. The passive endings are: -tia, -hia, -ngia, -a, -ia, -ina, -kia, -mia, -na, -nga, -ria, -whia, -whina, -kina.

(Te Kākano Textbook (Ed. 2): 65-67, 84-85; Te Pihinga Textbook (Ed. 2): 88;)

Ko ia te tangata whai mana o tēnei marae o Pehiaweri, he tangata hoki ia i arohaina nuitia e ōna iwi ake, me ōna hoa Pākehā hoki (TP 10/1903:6). / He was the person who had authority of this marae, Periaweri, and was a person greatly loved by his own tribes and also by his Pākehā friends.

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See also pīmuri

Synonyms: hiku whakahāngū, kūmuri hāngū

kūmuri hāngū

1. (noun) passive suffix, passive ending - endings added to a verb that is used when the subject undergoes the action of the verb. In Māori, verbs used in the passive usually take a passive ending. The passive endings are: -tia, -hia, -ngia, -a, -ia, -ina, -kia, -mia, -na, -nga, -ria, -whia, -whina, -kina.

(Te Kākano Textbook (Ed. 2): 65-67, 84-85; Te Pihinga Textbook (Ed. 2): 88;)

tūmahi hāngū

1. (noun) passive verb - a word that is used when the subject undergoes the action of the verb. In Māori, verbs used in the passive usually take a passive ending. The passive endings are: -tia, -hia, -ngia, -a, -ia, -ina, -kia, -mia, -na, -nga, -ria, -whia, -whina, -kina.

(Te Kākano Textbook (Ed. 2): 65-67, 84-85; Te Pihinga Textbook (Ed. 2): 88;)

I te rerenga kōrero 'kua horoia ngā rīhi', ko te 'horoia' te tūmahi hāngū. / In the sentence 'kua horoia ngā rīhi', 'horoia' is the passive verb.

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See also pīmuri whakahāngū

Synonyms: hāngūtanga

hāngūtanga

1. (noun) passive verb - a word that is used when the subject undergoes the action of the verb. In Māori, verbs used in the passive usually take a passive ending. The passive endings are: -tia, -hia, -ngia, -a, -ia, -ina, -kia, -mia, -na, -nga, -ria, -whia, -whina, -kina.

(Te Kākano Textbook (Ed. 2): 65-67, 84-85;)

Synonyms: tūmahi hāngū

kāwhiu

1. (noun) basket used in collecting seafood - used exclusively when diving for kina, pāua and kuku. It has a wide mesh and a rope at the opening edge so that it can be closed when swimming back to shore.

He mahi pai ki a ia te raranga whāriki, waikawa, rahu, kāwhiu, kete, ā, kōpae hoki (TTTT 2006:39). / She liked weaving mats, course mats, baskets of undressed harakeke, baskets for collecting seafood, kits and round baskets.
I ērā wā āta rarangatia ai e ngā māmā, e ngā kuia he kete motuhake hai hari mā ngā kairuku o te whānau ki te moana. He kāwhiu te ingoa o ngā kete nei. He kete nunui mō te ruku kaimoana anake (WT 2013:28). / In those times the aunties and elderly women plaited special baskets for the divers of the family to take to the sea. These baskets were called kāwhiu. They were large and used exclusively for diving for seafood.

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