harihari
1. (verb) (-a) to take, carry (a number of times).
Kāore e tahuri ki te whakapai ake i tō rātou wahapū, i ngā paipa harihari wai, harihari paru rānei o tō rātou tāone (TP 7/1913:4). / They aren't improving their harbour, the pipes for water reticulation or for carrying the sewage of the town.
harihari
1. (noun) song, dance, a song to make people pull together.
Tētahi take nui i whakaaetia e tēnei hui, ko ngā mahi a ngā tūpuna o mua kei ngaro, kia tino mahia nuitia i ēnei rā: Ngā whakataukī, ngā waiata Māori, ngā pepeha, me ngā tikanga katoa o ngā mea, me ngā harihari, tūtū ngārahu, me ngā hari kai (TP 8/1909:11). / An important matter that was agreed to by the meeting was the activities of the ancestors of former times that these should be used widely today: The aphorisms, Māori songs, tribal sayings and the customary practices of everything, the songs to unite people in a common purpose, war dances and songs for presenting food.
waka harihari tūroro
1. (noun) ambulance.
Kua whakaritea me haere au mā runga i te waka rererangi ki Rotorua, ā, mā te waka harihari tūroro o Taupō au e tiki mai, ā, ka mau ki Taupō (HP 1991:314). / It had been arranged that I should go on the plane to Rotorua and the Taupō ambulance would come to collect me and take me to Taupō.