Filters

Idioms

Phrases

Proverbs

Loan words

Historical loan words

Filters

Idioms

Phrases

Proverbs

Loan words

Historical loan words

wēta

1. (loan) (noun) west.

E kī atu ana ki te hiti o te wēta o Ākarana, kia whakatūria a Tā Hōri Kerei, mō te tūranga o Te Kirihi, me te whakapuaki, kāore te Kāwanatanga, e wehi i tēnei ki a Tā Hōri (TW 12/2/1875:9). / It advises Auckland City West to elect Sir George Grey to replace Mr Gillies, and declares that the Government do not in the least fear Sir George.

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wēta

1. (loan) (noun) wether.

Hipi - wēta e mou tonu ana ngā wūru, te 12/h ki te 13/h 3k; Hipi katikati, e 8/h me te 6k; Io, me ngā huruhuru anō, e 9/h me te 6k ki te 10/-h.... (TJ 8/12/1898:11). / Sheep - wethers still with their wool, 12 shillings to 13 shillings and threepence; Shorn sheep, 8s 6d; Ewes, unshorn, 9s 6d to 10s...

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weta

1. (noun) dirt, filth, muck, excrement, faeces.

Ka piri te weta o te kurī ki raro o taku hū (PK 2008:1066). / The dog's excrement was stuck to the bottom of my shoe.

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2. no way, never - an idiom to suggest that something wasn't, or won't be, achieved.

Pare: Ko wai kē te tangata māna e whaikōrero ngā manuhiri whakaeke? Rangi: Ko koe rā, e weta! (HKK 1999:87). / Pare: Who else can do the speech to thevisitors coming on? Rangi: You, never!
Pare: Māku tāua e mau atu ki te tauranga hī ika. Rangi: Tō weta e tā! Ka hia tāima e pakaru ana te mīhini o tō waka (HKK 1999:87). / Pare: I'll take us both to the fishing ground. Rangi: No way my friend! How many times has the engine of your boat broken down.

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Synonyms: rawa, nōwhea, tōu ene, nōhea, hore kau, kāhore kau, hore rawa, e hawa (e hawa), i neki, auare ake, e, he aha hoki

wētā

1. (noun) wētā - large insects of various species found in trees and caves. There are five broad groups of wētā: tree wētā (pūtangatanga), ground wētā, cave wētā (tokoriro), giant wētā (wētā punga) and tusked wētā. They are active at night and all Aotearoa/New Zealand species are wingless. The females have a long, egg-laying spike at the back.

Ka toa ko Tāne. Whāia, nāna te tini o ngā tamariki a Whiro i kāhaki ki te whenua - te waeroa, te namupoto, te naonao, te wētā, te pepe, te rango, te kōwhitiwhiti (Te Ara 2013). / Tāne was victorious and took Whiro’s many birds and insects down to earth - mosquitoes, small sandflies, midges, stick insects and praying mantises, wētā, moths and butterflies, blowflies and grasshoppers.

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See also pūtangatanga, tokoriro, wētā punga

wētā punga

1. (noun) giant wētā, Deinacrida spp. - the nine different species are all endangered. They eat leaves and have five to seven pairs of big spines on their back legs and a saddle-like shield on the neck wider than its head.

See also wētā

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