About the Maori language

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  • Опубликовано: 29 авг 2024
  • Want to learn Maori? Check out the link for 20% off uTalk - a language learning platform with more than 150 languages available: uta.lk/julingo
    IMPORTANT CORRECTION: Alien Weaponry are in fact of Maori descent! Thank you everybody for pointing that out!
    Everything about Maori culture seems so mysterious and captivating: enigmatic patterns and tattoos, energetic haka dance and of course the beautiful language. This is a small presentation of Maori language, where it came from and how it functions.
    Link to my Patreon account: / julingo
    Music used:
    Thunderlust by Deskant
    Brambles by Reynard Seidel
    Jungle Awakening by Rune Dale
    Videos used:
    Aotearoa available at: • Aotearoa
    New Zealand's first Haka at Rugby World Cup 2019 available at: • New Zealand's first Ha...
    Kawekorero Episode 71, Series 3, TX 31 May 2018 available at: • Kawekorero Episode 7...
    MAKEUP TUTORIAL IN TE REO MĀORI / BRONZED GLITTER SMOKEY EYE ⎸MIRIA FLAVELL available at: • MAKEUP TUTORIAL IN TE ...
    Te Mātārāe i Ōrehu - Waiata Tira 2020 Credit: Māori Television | AKHL available at: • Te Mātārāe i Ōrehu - W...
    ALIEN WEAPONRY - Kai Tangata (Official Video) | Napalm Records available at: • ALIEN WEAPONRY - Kai T...
    #maori #language #polynesian

Комментарии • 501

  • @zabaanshenaas
    @zabaanshenaas 4 года назад +176

    That was freaking awesome. You are a true linguaphile, and I admire how you present such a wide variety of languages.

    • @oneone-wt5bc
      @oneone-wt5bc 3 года назад +6

      She was wrong about so much

    • @kcmcalister1549
      @kcmcalister1549 3 года назад +4

      Very wrong about majority of it

    • @bingonamo7520
      @bingonamo7520 3 года назад +2

      It's not awesome, as it's not accurate. Only watch learning videos if the person in the video is from the country or race that they are talking about.

    • @elric58
      @elric58 3 года назад +10

      @@bingonamo7520 Seriously? Because someone not of the race or from the country couldn't possibly know anything about it or be accurate? Wow! Seems like there are a few other commenters who are Māori or of Māori decent who disagree.

    • @bingonamo7520
      @bingonamo7520 3 года назад

      @@elric58 Well she WAS inaccurate. Most NZers would know what a Maori tattoo looks like and most would know the guys from Alien Weaponry are part Maori. What's the point in people watching this to learn, when people are being told things that are completely wrong.

  • @tamhallett6949
    @tamhallett6949 3 года назад +81

    Alien Weaponry is a thrash metal musical trio from Waipu, New Zealand, formed in Auckland in 2010 by brothers Henry and Lewis de Jong. The trio consists of drummer Henry de Jong, guitarist Lewis de Jong and, since August 2020, bass player Tūranga Morgan-Edmonds. All three members have Māori ancestry and a number of their songs are written in the Māori language.

    • @Eskii_NZL
      @Eskii_NZL 9 месяцев назад

      Chur arhat band is fucking awesome bro. As a proud Māori I have nothing but huge respect for them

    • @user-oh4yd5uh4e
      @user-oh4yd5uh4e 5 месяцев назад

      table and chur@@Eskii_NZL

  • @cannonssouthside770
    @cannonssouthside770 3 года назад +183

    I loved seeing my language broken down that way. Something that most Maori probably wouldn't even think too much about. Well done! Pronunciation was really good too.

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  3 года назад +17

      So glad you liked it ☺️

    • @YiddoHuayi
      @YiddoHuayi 3 года назад +6

      Better than most (NZ) Pakeha!

    • @balazskiss985
      @balazskiss985 3 года назад +5

      @@JuLingo kő= stone in magyar, hungary
      kövi = from kő
      kiwi=kövi= a bird live in holes in rocks

    • @balazskiss985
      @balazskiss985 3 года назад +3

      @@JuLingo magyar works same way
      elkáposztástalaníthatatlanságaitokérti
      for that you are not able to get over-cabbeaged...literally

    • @balazskiss985
      @balazskiss985 3 года назад

      @@JuLingo so they had horse?

  • @kyriakosheridan7491
    @kyriakosheridan7491 3 года назад +184

    This was actually a pretty good presentation! Your accent is really cute. However, I have to correct you on one point: even though the guys from Alien Weaponry (I freakin' love this band!) all look like Pakehas - Kiwis of European descent, Henry and Lewis actually have very proud Maori whakapaka and that's the reason they speak and sing in Te Reo so well. I just don't understand what the Aztec tattoo at 8:40 was doing there...I guess it was meant to show a Maori design, like your moko kauae on the video thumbnail. Good effort overall though!

    • @ocevicheband502
      @ocevicheband502 3 года назад +2

      Not one musket among the breach loaders . But! The IHI!!! Was there! Maakora was there!!! Te MANU also floated alongside HONGI !!!

    • @tehyalee390
      @tehyalee390 3 года назад +3

      Agreed, the only things I could fault in this video! Not used to such good research and pronunciation

    • @charlesthebald3671
      @charlesthebald3671 3 года назад +9

      In the Americas, particularly in Latin America, that 'Aztec' style of tattoo is called Maori. I don't know why.

    • @bingonamo7520
      @bingonamo7520 3 года назад

      I pointed out the exact same 2 mistakes awhile ago and have been under attack for it ever since.

    • @ash_phoenix3282
      @ash_phoenix3282 3 года назад +1

      I love alien weaponry! Te Reo metal just sounds fitting

  • @mabonbran8913
    @mabonbran8913 3 года назад +20

    It looks like you're dancing when you speak, your passion for your subject is infectious!

  • @frankeeandrews5564
    @frankeeandrews5564 3 года назад +37

    Holy Heck, your pronunciation caught me off guard. Your bloody awesome lady from a Māori. This video is highly regarded. You got my Sub and like.

  • @maapauu4282
    @maapauu4282 Год назад +11

    As a Maaori person of Waikato and Ngaati Pukenga descent who is trying to learn Maaori, I am really impressed by this video. This seemed really well-researched, not many New Zealanders are this researched, let alone someone all the way in Latvia!
    Fun fact, even though nouns don't usually have number, number is expressed via articles! For example, you mentioned the article "te", there is actually a separate article, "ngaa", meaning the same thing but plural.
    By the way, I'm kind of curious to know where you got the pattern from your moko kauae from? I'm guessing not many people know what all the symbols mean in Latvia, so you must have done really good research! Ka pai, e hoa!
    By the way, if you haven't done this already, it might be cool to check out Te re Moriori? It's an extinct relative of Maori traditionally spoken in Rekohu, or the Chatham islands that is currently undergoing a revival.

  • @geecee515
    @geecee515 4 года назад +38

    Kia ora nga mihi nui kia koe... so great that you have a love for Te Reo Maori. I really enjoyed your video and Alien Weaponry (The rock music band) that you mentioned in your video are actually Maori. They whakapapa back to Te Arawa, the music video is Ngapuhi (Tribe from the North) with muskets invading the Te Arawa people in the music video. A reference to the boys whakapapa. Kia ora.

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  3 года назад +10

      That's awesome, thank you for sharing!!!

  • @Tehui1974
    @Tehui1974 4 года назад +31

    I like your energy. Māori is my second language and I currently speak it at an intermediate level. Some of the interpretations were not entirely accurate, but I can see no malice was intended. I'm interested to know what you first language is and where you're from. I might find out by looking at some of you other videos I guess.

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  3 года назад +22

      It's so awesome that you speak this unique language! I'm from Latvia ☺️

  • @idanzamir7540
    @idanzamir7540 4 года назад +21

    Very interesting, it really makes me happy to see an indigenous culture flourish!

  • @ploomich
    @ploomich 4 года назад +11

    You are fantastic! ❤️
    Great choice of language, I always find the Polynesian languages and cultures fascinating.

  • @chapsburg4334
    @chapsburg4334 4 года назад +13

    I just discovered your channel and it is wonderful and informative. I hope you continue to make these videos.🙏🏼🙏🏼

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  4 года назад +1

      Thank you, I will for sure 😉

  • @gaufrid1956
    @gaufrid1956 3 года назад +10

    Well done, Julie! I was born "across the Ditch" from Aotearoa, and live now in Mindanao Philippines with my Filipina wife who speaks fluent English, Tagalog, Binisaya, Boholano, Ilonggo, and her tribal language, Higaonon Binukid. I've loved learning Tagalog and Binisaya, but as yet I only know a little of Higaonon Binukid. The languages here follow the same sentence structure as Te Reo, and also use various markers. "Ng" is pronounced the same way as in Te Reo. There is no "C", "F", "J", "Q", "V", "X" or "Z". In Binisaya (Cebuano), originally there were no vowels "E" or "O", but they were introduced by the Spaniards. There is no gender, no noun or verb conjugations, and markers indicate tense, focus (subject) and object. "Ba" is the question marker. Words can be spelled with either "I" or "E", and "O" or "U", but are always pronounced as "I" and "U". The languages are phonetic.Including English, I understand there are 187 different languages in the Philippines, which might be why there are more consonants. However, many languages are not influenced too much by others due to isolation. Spanish loan words are the only ones to exhibit gender. Here in Mindanao we count 1 to 10 in Binisaya, and from there on in Spanish! People from Cebu and the Visayas will use Cebuano numbers.

    • @mariechellavergara9834
      @mariechellavergara9834 3 года назад +2

      When I visited I learned that they also use mata for eyes and a lot of their numbers sounds like tagalog...

    • @gaufrid1956
      @gaufrid1956 3 года назад +1

      @@mariechellavergara9834 that's not a surprise. It would be interesting to see just how much there is in common. I like the Austronesian languages for their relative simplicity, and the lack of gender and case endings, plus the fact that they are phonetic, unlike English. I think Filipinos do a very good job at learning English, because it is so different from the native Filipino languages.

    • @shaunmckenzie5509
      @shaunmckenzie5509 2 года назад +1

      Tagalog is distantly related to Maori and the other Polynesian languages

    • @gaufrid1956
      @gaufrid1956 2 года назад

      @@shaunmckenzie5509 Tama na! It's true! They are all Austronesian languages, and there is a theory that all Austronesian languages developed from the indigenous languages of Taiwan. Also, some Filipino languages have loan words from Hokkien Chinese, which is no surprise considering that Taiwan is close to the northern part of Luzon, and Hokkien Chinese was spoken in Taiwan. The appellations "kuya" and "ate" for older brother and older sister respectively are examples.

  • @arbolvencido
    @arbolvencido 2 года назад +13

    I always enjoy your videos, great research. A little note: the tattoo you shows us in the 8:40 is actually an aztec symbol. It's appears in the Mexican 10 pesos coin.
    Saludos desde México

    • @pezcadron6364
      @pezcadron6364 2 года назад +3

      Xd i think that was on purpsose, she was talking about how some.people mix the maori culture whit theirs

    • @merlin5420
      @merlin5420 Год назад +1

      The Polynesians are known to have made landfall in the Americas.

  • @jakkuwolfinsomnia8058
    @jakkuwolfinsomnia8058 3 года назад +9

    That was an awesome linguistic explanation of Maōri, I really liked your video. The alphabet is simple but it seems to share east asian grammar like Japanese and Korean have particles too, and what is super interesting is how the verb comes before the subject whereas in Japanese an Korean the verb goes at the end. Thank you for teaching me :D

  • @manuhuiabennett124
    @manuhuiabennett124 4 года назад +81

    Take note @JuLingo:
    The origins of my language came
    from the Kākā bird! In its throat it carried
    the seeds, manatawa and manapou!
    From Hawaiki to Aotearoa, came with
    it the essence of my language!
    From its throat, it spouted the seeds!
    And thus grew the tawa tree!
    Its kernel was the language of karakia!
    Binding us to the spiritual world!
    Where Ranginui and Papatūānuku
    begot all
    their children!
    And in this world they debated
    making the first utterances of the language!
    An ancient language of the Gods!
    Turning to the world they grasped,
    Tangaroa with the crashing seas,
    Ruaumoko rumbling at the bossom!
    And their reverberating echoes heard!
    A changing world, and the tawa grows
    with a vocabulary anew with words!
    Sometimes mixing with English!
    Yet, this is the origins of my language

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  4 года назад +16

      this is awesome 👍

    • @manuhuiabennett124
      @manuhuiabennett124 4 года назад +10

      @@JuLingo please forgive me. Hope this guides you well!

    • @moziboy75
      @moziboy75 4 года назад +5

      @@manuhuiabennett124 ko whanau koe?
      My tupuna and namesake is Wiremu Rakeipoho Bennett
      Ko Ruahine te maunga
      Ko Tuwharetoa te iwi
      Ko Moawhango te marae

    • @AilsaPehi
      @AilsaPehi 3 года назад +1

      Kia Ora. Ae. You know much e hoa. As you should being descendant. I look forward to your channel.

    • @manuhuiabennett124
      @manuhuiabennett124 3 года назад +2

      @@moziboy75 kia ora e te whanaunga!

  • @HERObyPROXY
    @HERObyPROXY 4 года назад +15

    Kia ora! Thanks for the video on Te Reo Maori from my homeland! Your pronunciation wasn't bad either - good job!

    • @HERObyPROXY
      @HERObyPROXY 4 года назад +3

      @@JuLingo I'm not a native speaker but I can tell good pronunciation from the bad attempts of many New Zealanders who don't speak Maori. You did a great job with your pronunciation for the video!

  • @bjekickic
    @bjekickic 4 года назад +14

    looking forward to a video about Hungarian one day, its so scary and fascinating ! beautiful but takes forever to learn properly :D keep up the good work

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  4 года назад +7

      Lora thank you! Oh yeah, Hungarian, the different guy 😅 have to do a video about it ☺️

  • @libellelibelle9643
    @libellelibelle9643 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for this great video. Great fun to watch. Learned something new, also my 12year old son ("Mana"). Love from Germany🇩🇪

  • @tachiwaiomio8459
    @tachiwaiomio8459 3 года назад +16

    Could you please remove the thumbnail of you “wearing” a Moko Kauae? Moko Kauae is highly highly Tāpu and worn by Wāhine Māori.

    • @bringit2482
      @bringit2482 3 года назад +3

      Nope leave it up cos I like it. Please don't listen to this snowflake;)

    • @S050683
      @S050683 2 года назад +2

      @@PresGrove It's cultural APPRECIATION. What is people's obsession with cultural appropriation where there is none these days? Unless you do these things in a dickish manner there's nothing wrong. She's highlighting your culture and spreading it. Learn to be appreciative, like she's appreciating your language and culture. It's the most visual way for her to show the culture in a thumbnail. Unless you'd rather her dress as a kiwi bird so we know it's from NZ but isn't 'appropriation' (such a bullshit term). She isn't doing it to offend or insult. And quite frankly, if that's the way you and others react to someone trying to honestly teach about your language and culture as best as they can in a short video, you're the one that's being dickish not her.

  • @jarlbregadan914
    @jarlbregadan914 Год назад +1

    I learned about a language I knew nothing about AND got a new band to headbang to. Thanks, Julie.

  • @poisontoad8007
    @poisontoad8007 3 года назад +3

    Hey the moko on your thumbnail really suits you, and what a great presentation! Kia ora Julia!

  • @holisticmaya
    @holisticmaya 4 года назад +12

    I get so excited when you upload! I always wonder what mysterious language you’ll talk about next:) this did not disappoint! So interesting the Maori language, people and their culture. I just rewatched your Georgian language video for the 3rd time:p I just came back from traveling in Georgia. Didi Madloba! (Thank you!)

    • @holisticmaya
      @holisticmaya 4 года назад +1

      KALUMO Georgia is one of my top favourite countries in the world :) it’s uniquely beautiful and rich in culture and history. The nature is breathtaking too. You’d love it!

  • @reboot9247
    @reboot9247 2 года назад +2

    Thankyou for pronouncing our language correctly, it shows you took the time to learn it. ka pai ehoa

  • @ariochoa6971
    @ariochoa6971 3 года назад +4

    The fact that she threw in alien weaponry is simply amazing.

  • @marcdigiambattista751
    @marcdigiambattista751 2 года назад +2

    I've been enjoying these videos on languages of the world, but the shout out to Alien Weaponry just made me love your channel even more. And yes, as others have already stated all of the band have a Maori lineage.

  • @fidencia5144
    @fidencia5144 3 года назад +2

    Congratulations for this very interesting contribution to a first approach to Maori language. Very nice maps and pictures to keep us entertained all the way through.

  • @eso_erica
    @eso_erica 3 года назад +5

    Thank you for making videos, and covering Maori!

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  3 года назад +3

      My pleasure ☺️

  • @jorgepadilha1873
    @jorgepadilha1873 4 года назад +4

    Another awesome video!

  • @renatomorello4318
    @renatomorello4318 4 года назад +2

    Your videos are always a SHOW of culture. Congratulations!!

  • @hayishley
    @hayishley 3 года назад +2

    Kia Ora mō tēnā - thank you for this. I am Māori currently in the process of learning my beautiful language and thoroughly enjoyed this video!
    There are only two points I wanted to mention: the clip of Te mātārāe i Ōrehu performing at Te Matatini is of them singing the Samoan part of the song as they dedicated their Waiata Tira to Samoa in respect of the loss of life there after the measles outbreak. The second half of the song is in Māori (though there are some Samoan lines there too) so if you were wanting to relate the song to the pronunciation of the Māori language, best to take a snip from a little later in the song :)
    Secondly, the Ka tense marker is actually used to indicate future tense. It can be used for present tense depending on the context/iwi but the more common present tense markers are Kei te and E (verb) ana ☺️
    Ōtira, tino mīharo to mahi e hoa!

  • @derbdep
    @derbdep Год назад +5

    Wonderful information! Please do one for Philippine languages like Filipino/Tagalog or Visayan. They're also members of the Austronesian language family :)

  • @ponokealii
    @ponokealii Год назад +1

    Māhalo for talking about the Maori language.
    I'm Hawaiian and, as I'm sure you must know, Hawaiians like Maori, Tahitians, Samoans, Tongans, Marquesans, Tuamotuans and other Polynesians are very closely related.
    I must commend you on your excellent research on the Maori language even to the accuracy of your pronunciation.
    One thing that you should know is that the extreme isolation of Polynesians on their individual island groups meant that there was no need to develop a system of written language because the development of writing was a function of the need to communicate with foreigners as the result of trade and Polynesians were so isolated from each other and from human societies 😢living on land that we could communicate easily with other Polynesians because our Polynesian root language was similar enough for Polynesian groups to communicate with one another.
    But we didn't need to develop a system of writing because we only ever encountered other Polynesians and our root language was the same so we could easily with one another.
    Also we understand and utilize the power of sound (vibration) to the extent that we have so stories of our people being able to repel invasion by utilizing the power of chanting in unison to create a force field that could repel an invasion fleet.
    Also our Hawaiian origin story is called Ka Makali'i Kumulipo Mo'olelo o nā Kānaka Oiwi o Hawai'i or "The Pleiadian Origin Story of the Native People of Hawai'i" because our origin story speaks of our progenitors, Wākea and Papahānaumoku, as being Pleiadian Royal half siblings.
    Wākea descended to the summit of the mountain that still bears his name, Mauna a Wākea - the tallest mountain on Gaia.
    When he arrived on Earth he met, fell in love with and married his Royal Pleiadian half sister, Papahānaumoku (Papa) who was born on Gaia.
    Together they produced children who are the Ali'i, Hawaiian Royals who trace their genealogy back to Wākea and Papa.
    Keep up all of the great linguistics work that you do. Māhalo piha iā ka hana pono.
    Ponokeali'i
    Kuhina Nui (Prime Minister)
    The Royal Hawaiian Monarchy
    government of
    The Hawaiian Kingdom

  • @michaeldavis9190
    @michaeldavis9190 4 года назад +2

    Oh nice, I used to be interested in Maori culture. Don't remember much about it, but it's nice to learn about the language. Loved the video. The animation with the letters being dropped out of the boat was pretty cute.

  • @odesangel
    @odesangel 2 года назад +1

    Pleasantly surprised to see Alien Weaponry on a video about language. I saw them live in Chicago several years ago. I agree, Maori and metal are a great combo.

  • @EngfurDeu
    @EngfurDeu Год назад +1

    I lived in New Zealand for four months in the North Island, and I always wondered why Maori words never ended in consonants. What an interesting phenomenon! Sweet as!

  • @thorralf
    @thorralf 3 года назад +7

    You have a really refreshing way to present languages, but I need to correct one fact: The metal band Alien Weaponry has (half) semi-Maori members! They do a lot to recall the history of the ancestors as in the song that you have put in your video...

    • @MANU-ho3uq
      @MANU-ho3uq 3 года назад +1

      Who are you to say semi ? What a dumb thing to say

    • @peterteohaere4986
      @peterteohaere4986 3 года назад +2

      The 2 brothers are of maori decent there whakapapa traces back to Ngati Pikiao around Rotorua area .

    • @annamcallister1489
      @annamcallister1489 3 года назад

      There's no such thing as a Semi-Māori.

  • @Deavertex
    @Deavertex 4 года назад +3

    Love your videos! Once again, a masterful presentation.

    • @martagoebiewska483
      @martagoebiewska483 4 года назад +1

      Thanks... It was very interesting :) nicely done :)

  • @shadowboxing7029
    @shadowboxing7029 3 года назад +1

    That thumb nail got me, that moko kaue looked stunning on you. Though I imagine it caused a bit of controversy lol.

  • @M.athematech
    @M.athematech 4 года назад +13

    The cat was like, "get me away from this crazy lady!"

  • @Squimple
    @Squimple 3 года назад +5

    That place name is longer than Llanfair­pwllgwyngyll­gogery­chwyrn­drobwll­llan­tysilio­gogo­goch! These videos are so good, especially her humour

  • @GS-wz1ud
    @GS-wz1ud 3 года назад +6

    Good video, great pronunciation. And FYI, Alien Weponary, the metal band, are of Maori descent, even if they are muggles, lol.

  • @MetSlipLotrReborn
    @MetSlipLotrReborn 4 года назад +14

    Hello, I would like to point a mistake: the tattoo that you show around 8:40 is actually the inner circle of the “piedra del sol” (sun stone), a sculpture representing the cosmovision of the mexica (aka the aztecs). This circle represents the (current) sun god Tonatiuh surrounded by the suns of the four previous eras (the symbols inside the large squares), and a ring with the symbols of the twenty days of the mexica months. However, I don’t know if the patterns below it are of maori origin.
    Anyway, nice video; it seems you’re still trying new stuff to find your own style. Hope to see more videos in the future, keep up the good work!

    • @manuhuiabennett124
      @manuhuiabennett124 4 года назад +2

      There is nothing to the tattoo that originates from Maori. Most facts are very wrong as well.

  • @daneoates8099
    @daneoates8099 3 года назад +21

    Great introduction to te reo me to ao Māori, however you may want to remove the image of yourself with moko kauae from the thumbnail. Wearing moko kauae is highly tāpu, and specific to a person and their whakapapa. It's a right reserved for wahine Māori and Wahine Māori alone.

    • @farkry7645
      @farkry7645 3 года назад

      Gatekeeper detected lmao. #mokotheworld

    • @daneoates8099
      @daneoates8099 3 года назад

      @@farkry7645 Call it gatekeeping if you like, I stand by my comment. Anyone other than Wahine Māori wearing moko kauae is unacceptable cultural appropriation. Moko is sacred, and tells important stories about whakapapa and identity - it is not a fun dress up accessory.

    • @farkry7645
      @farkry7645 3 года назад +1

      @@daneoates8099 Na. The world's not black and white like that. Pākeha who grow up in te ao Maori don't meet your criteria, for example. I'm gonna assume you're not some "blood purist", and just didn't think your stance through deeply enough.
      Chur chur

    • @daneoates8099
      @daneoates8099 3 года назад

      @@farkry7645 Whāngai is a very different issue, and it’s a good conversation to have about what makes someone māori and whether pākehā raised in Te ao māori share māori cultural heritage. I would say they do, and my own conception of whakapapa is broader than blood lineage - I see it as a line of culture and community, as well as one of direct genealogical descent.
      That however has nothing at all to do with a random white person with no connection to Te ao māori wearing a random moko kauae for a RUclips thumbnail. Moko is deeply personal, and we shouldn’t conflate complicated edge cases of identity and ethnicity with flippant misuse of a sacred cultural tradition.

  • @scotty1404
    @scotty1404 4 года назад +1

    Thank you Julie, that was an awesome video.
    There are a lot of folks correcting you on certain points.
    At the end of the day your video is informative.
    Just like everything online you must take it with a grain of salt as to the authenticity and actual facts.
    You done a great job.
    Ka pai kare

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  3 года назад +2

      Thank you for your comment! I really don't mind some healthy criticism, of course I can't learn the whole foreign culture in a couple of weeks, even though I do the best I can ☺️ my main point is to raise people's interest about language diversity and especially smaller languages of our planet, to talk about it, so more people learn that they exist and get interested in them ☺️

  • @thomastibbals5810
    @thomastibbals5810 4 месяца назад

    You're hilarious! I've seen similar videos, but...
    but NOTHING...
    Nothing quite this fun!!! Thank you for making this information so digestible through humor.

  • @mrtoast244
    @mrtoast244 7 дней назад +1

    I'm Maori but never learnt to speak the language. As a kid I just was never really that interested since practically nobody spoke it outside of school or events. Like, we sang the school song every week in High School, once in Maori and again in English. We also did the Haka at every Sport event or when we got new Students or Teachers, I even grew up hearing Maori translated nursery rhymes (Oma Rapiti got stuck in my head a bunch as a kid lol). But it just seemed like nobody spoke it just casually, so I just sort of never learnt it. My Grandfather spoke traditional Maori but never at home, only when we were at family/Iwi functions.
    I recently got into languages (I've been learning German for over a year now, technically I'm at a conversational level B1-B2 but I never get to speak it here in NZ lol) so I feel pretty confident in my ability to learn grammar structures now, compared to when I was a kid, so was actually thinking of picking Maori up as my 3rd Language. There's not as many resources as one of the more popular languages (Like Spanish, German or French) so it's harder to learn but our country basically saved it from extinction lol so that's to be expected.
    I actually think it would be a lot less painful to learn than German, like, Gendered Nouns + finding the correct case are the most annoying thing since it makes you sound like a total scrub when you get them wrong lmao. Also reflexive pronouns. At least my ear is still pretty good for Maori words, since I grew up with it (despite not really learning it) so the listening part of learning Maori would probably be a lot easier to get used to than German was (I still have a hard time listening for modal verbs and associating the second verb correctly immediately/without subtitles).

  • @coreymcgaffin3957
    @coreymcgaffin3957 3 года назад

    I never Comment on RUclips but as a Pākehā from Whakatāne, New Zealand, I am very impressed! I have learnt more about the structure/history of the Māori language on this video than I did at school. Great pronunciation and research!👏 You are very welcome to come visit this beautiful serene country!⛅🏞️🌈

  • @Raventooth
    @Raventooth 4 года назад +52

    Enlightening. Especially about the 'mana' as life force.
    Do you have any interest in making a video on the Goidelic language of Gælige?
    The Irish have a boat culture similar to this Polynesian one. Only in the Irish the The Tuath Dé Danann came by ship.
    Sláinte!

  • @TrystaneTheBlack
    @TrystaneTheBlack 3 года назад +2

    Me: Oh wow she's done a video on my culture. *hears her pronunciation* "SHE'S SPEAKING CLEAR MAORI OMG!". Props to you for the pronunciation, I honestly wasn't expecting it to be so good as even people here in New Zealand still half-ass it at best.

  • @HyperzonMusicalies
    @HyperzonMusicalies 4 года назад +6

    Can you talk about the Filippino language some day? It's not mandatory though ☺☺☺
    And nice video explanation you make Julie! ✌ from Bulgaria!

  • @adammorehouse7664
    @adammorehouse7664 3 года назад +2

    A lovely discription. May I point out something that you may not have thought of? How common is that dual pronoun structure? That is a HUGE clue on another language that affected all Oceanic languages. You will be amazed! It's not something too many people pick up on.

  • @SpartaVictor
    @SpartaVictor 2 года назад +2

    As a Scandinavian, I immediately got asosciations to Finnish when hearing the samples of the spoken language. Far away as far as language families are concerned, but both being rich in the use of vowels. Just watched the video on Mongolian before this one, which was quite the contrast with being almost a consonant-only language!

  • @adlamis
    @adlamis Год назад +1

    Great pronunciation for someone who's not even Kiwi, let alone Māori. Gotta say, though, 1st century AD is the earliest date I've ever heard for the arrival of Māori here, by quite a long way. Modern archaeology puts the first settlement at mid 13th century. I've heard a Māori estimate based on genealogy that puts it in the last century or two of the first millennium.
    I should also add that ng and wh are digraphs (like English th and sh), not diphthongs.
    Did you know that the Māori word for "what" - aha functions mainly as a noun, but can also function as a verb? It even has a passive ending -tia! The Māori for "What has happened to you?" is "Kua ahatia koe?" Literally, "You have been whatted?"
    Overall though, I'm impressed with the accuracy and with the care you have taken over this. I've enjoyed several of your other language videos recently, and this gives me increased confidence in the information you've shared there.
    Mā te Atua koe e manaaki!

  • @tashuntka
    @tashuntka Год назад +1

    Holy Cow.....That was sooo awesome.
    My favourite JuLingo so far 💛💛💛
    From 🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘😁

  • @JayAlcala23
    @JayAlcala23 Год назад

    JL, as usual loving your videos. I had Alien Weapons in my head the whole time, so seeing you feature the band for a second I cheered "Hell yea!". If I'm not mistaken those boys aren't full Maori, but at least a few of them are part Maori and attended local cultural centers growing up. Love it.

  • @cellion5848
    @cellion5848 4 года назад +1

    I love all your videos! I just subscribed and binged them all. They really do give a brief summary of the language like culture, writing, origin, etc. and very informative. Please do more asian/austronesian languages like Tagalog or the Philippines languages :)

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  4 года назад +2

      Really happy you enjoyed it! My goal is to make much more videos and to cover austronesian languages as well as the other ones. Really hope it's gonna be possible soon ☺️

  • @marcusfreire7349
    @marcusfreire7349 2 года назад +2

    I was very fortunate to spend six months in the North Island many years ago. Truly 9ne of the most beautiful countries I've ever been to.. a close runner up to my native Scotland. Although I do prefer your weather. Found many cultural similarities with the highlanders of Scotland. An oppressed people with a diminished language, cultural presence in our own nations. Celtic and Polynesian brothers

  • @zeldamachina6305
    @zeldamachina6305 3 года назад +2

    That's one reason why I love Heavy Metal, it's so great, and diverse, that it's passion is expressed from languages all over the world. As a massively multilingual speaker, this is heartwarming, but also forward thinking and I appreciate it. If I may say in Maori: He pai ki ahau te reo Maori.

  • @Integralchinese
    @Integralchinese 4 года назад +1

    love the channel and your passion for languages

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  4 года назад +1

      thank you for support ☺️

  • @cynicalex6884
    @cynicalex6884 3 года назад +1

    YAY! This video really helped me with my homework. Thanks.

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  3 года назад

      Glad it helped!

  • @marcusty6957
    @marcusty6957 2 года назад +1

    “Alien Weaponry” the drummer and the guitarist/vocalist are brothers. They are Maori decent through their father.

  • @poisontoad8007
    @poisontoad8007 3 года назад +1

    Alien Weaponry are a great band! But I have to say a couple of those guys identify as Māori even if they don't look it, which is common in Aotearoa. Also many of us identify as Pākeha but have Māori ancestry, especially where I am in the north. As a true melting pot most of us whose tauiwi side arrived 3 generations ago or more will have some Māori blood. We also have a custom called whāngai, which is a little like an informal adoption, but also different in many ways. Therefore many people are raised in cultural contexts outside their dominant genetics, but here it is what you relate to and _feel_ you are that defines your culture. If you are a Pākeha child adopted into a Māori family then as an adult it is up to you how you identify yourself, and vice-versa. I personally know a Pākeha and a German that are prominent Māori activists and both are fully accepted into their local hapū. Kia ora 😊

  • @NYC20thCenturyLtd
    @NYC20thCenturyLtd 3 года назад +10

    Gaby DOES have a lot of Mana!!! Most cats do... 😂

  • @echo7759
    @echo7759 3 года назад

    Alien Weaponry is a thrash metal musical trio from Waipu, New Zealand, formed in Auckland in 2010. All three members have Māori ancestry and a number of their songs are written in the Māori language. Henry Te Reiwhati de Jong, guitarist/singer Lewis Raharuhi de Jong and, since August 2020, bass player Tūranga Morgan-Edmonds. Their tribal connections are with Ngāti Pikiao and Ngāti Raukawa. Great video, by the way! :)

  • @scarlettstott7570
    @scarlettstott7570 3 года назад +2

    I am a Kiwi and we actually only have 2 official languages, Maori and Sign Language. English is a default language.
    Some things of interest, maori means pure or natural. The macrons used to be double letters seen in old literature. Different dialects are spoken in different tribes (iwi) around Aotearoa so in some places common words such as whānau (pron. Farno) are pronounced as warno.
    One other thing, there is a big resurgence of reo Maori learning here at the moment, it is a very trendy thing to do

    • @jjiselle285
      @jjiselle285 3 года назад +3

      i am also a kiwi, and we actually have three official languages. english is not a “default language”, it is one of our official ones. the word māori has many meanings, but the most common one isn’t “pure”, it’s actually “normal” or “ordinary”. pre-european māori men would have called themselves “māori tangata” meaning “ordinary man”.

  • @michaelheliotis5279
    @michaelheliotis5279 3 года назад +1

    This video is very well researched and the pronunciation was great! One minor note, though: the ⟨wh⟩ is properly a voiceless bilabial fricative [ɸ], rather then [f], but these days a bilabial sound is becoming more common due to the influence of English, especially with younger speakers. That's actually why the Christian missionaries choose to represent it with the ⟨wh⟩ digraph rather than just using an F, because it's basically just a breathy W.

    • @merlin5420
      @merlin5420 Год назад

      Whanganui/ Wanganui Tomato/ Tamaytow 😂

  • @gordonpi8674
    @gordonpi8674 Год назад +1

    The definite article is strikingly similar like in some Indo-European languages, like eng: the, greek: tis, bulgarian: te, ta, to, etc.

  • @alanwendt9697
    @alanwendt9697 3 года назад +2

    Someone may have mentioned this already but the two brothers of the original 3 band members do in fact have Maori heritage and the new member that joined last year does too FYI

  • @AilsaPehi
    @AilsaPehi 3 года назад +1

    Excellent work. Thank you.

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  3 года назад +1

      Thank you too!

  • @michaeltaylor7407
    @michaeltaylor7407 3 года назад

    Thanks Julie. Fascinating video!

  • @mdutch
    @mdutch 3 года назад

    Discovered the channel today. Aleady listened to four videos. Very interesting!

  • @antonoka
    @antonoka Год назад

    Well done for explaining our history and acknowledging our language. Thank you and Ngaa mihinui.

  • @vicsaul5459
    @vicsaul5459 3 года назад

    Julingo this is a brilliant channel! brava

  • @fidenemini111
    @fidenemini111 3 года назад +2

    Interesting presentation. maori language has some features which make it sounding kind of Japanese, though they are not related to each other. A complex Tattoe at 8:40 however has nothing to do with Maori - it depicts Aztec Sun Stone 😊. Apart from this - cool information as always.

  • @bernhardtmitdt2586
    @bernhardtmitdt2586 Год назад

    thank you so much for this very motivating introduction in this beautiful language.

  • @shaunmckenzie5509
    @shaunmckenzie5509 2 года назад +1

    You pronounce Maori better than many NZers, and that's no exaggeration

  • @hyperion303
    @hyperion303 3 года назад

    What an awesome video I've just watched :D
    Love your channel!
    Cheers from southern Baltic neighbours :D

  • @petebrandon8160
    @petebrandon8160 3 года назад +2

    Amazing Julie- how do you know all these languages? I'm in awe!

  • @random-pe9mh
    @random-pe9mh 2 года назад +1

    Shoutout to my fellow Māori brothers/sisters from a fellow Austronesian. I'm part of the people that shaped the largest Austronesian ethnic group by population, Javanese people from the island of Java, Indonesia. Tresna❤Aroha

    • @random-pe9mh
      @random-pe9mh 2 года назад +1

      These are numbers in Javanese (low level)
      1, siji
      2, loro
      3, telu
      4, papat
      5, lima
      6, enem
      7, pitu
      8, wolu
      9, sanga
      10, sepuluh

    • @random-pe9mh
      @random-pe9mh 2 года назад +1

      These are numbers in Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian)
      1, satu
      2, dua
      3, tiga
      4, epat
      5, lima
      6, enam
      7, tujuh
      8, delapan
      9, sembilan
      10, sepuluh

    • @merlin5420
      @merlin5420 Год назад

      The Lima/ Rima family 👍🏽

  • @oldmangranny5oldmangranny56
    @oldmangranny5oldmangranny56 3 года назад +5

    "Ka" is a future tense.

    • @scarlettstott7570
      @scarlettstott7570 3 года назад

      You're right but it can be used for any tense and is especially used for storytelling once the tense is established

    • @oldmangranny5oldmangranny56
      @oldmangranny5oldmangranny56 3 года назад +2

      @@scarlettstott7570 The tense wasn't established in the example phrase given.

    • @scarlettstott7570
      @scarlettstott7570 3 года назад +1

      @@oldmangranny5oldmangranny56 true, but in general

    • @oldmangranny5oldmangranny56
      @oldmangranny5oldmangranny56 3 года назад +2

      @@scarlettstott7570 He pai e Scarlett Stott.

  • @annavanboening6991
    @annavanboening6991 2 года назад

    I found this extremely helpful however did want to say alien weaponry does consist of three members of Maori descent!!! This is actually the reason I was introduced into the language and the reason I would like to learn listening to their songs taught me things of the culture I wanted to research when I dove into that I needed to know more. I found all pronunciations extremely helpful thank you for the video!

  •  3 года назад +1

    A diphtong doesn’t have to do with letters or graphs. A diphtong is the transition from one vowel to another. So it is about sounds, not letters. Wikipedia calls it a gliding vowel. “ng” in this video can be referred to as a digraph, meaning two letters make a sound different to the sounds from the sepatare letters combined. So: digraphs happen in script while diphtongs happen in sound. And they don’t even have to imply each other. Take English as a language with extensive diphtong usage. In the word “I”, the single letter represents a diphtong [ʌɪ̯], whereas the digraph “ee” in “see” makes only a simple vowel: [iː].

  • @Anglo-mapping
    @Anglo-mapping Год назад +1

    Im making a language with my friends named kāijoké that is highly based on māori

  • @stefanmargraf7878
    @stefanmargraf7878 4 года назад +2

    Talofa! Thats why i gave my sons polynesian names: anybody of any language can speak them. (some family members lived in West-Samoa..)

  • @_chelcie
    @_chelcie 3 года назад

    such an amazing informative video ngā mihi nui!! ❤️❤️❤️

  • @Timurlane100
    @Timurlane100 4 года назад +2

    Very cool. Thank you.

  • @gabrielbarrios9024
    @gabrielbarrios9024 4 года назад

    It would be great if you uploaded videos more often! Great content!

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  4 года назад +2

      that's really my biggest wish right now! i'm trying hard, but well this summer has been extra busy because of the thesis. But the new video should be ready next week ☺️

  • @titicoqui
    @titicoqui 3 года назад

    profound and lively explanation love the way you described their growing distaste for vowels

    • @echo7759
      @echo7759 3 года назад

      you mean consonants.

    • @titicoqui
      @titicoqui 3 года назад +1

      @@echo7759 yes my mistake

    • @echo7759
      @echo7759 3 года назад

      @@titicoqui lols .. all good 👍🙂

  • @Minas__Morgul
    @Minas__Morgul Год назад

    за кота отдельный лайк, а за метал группу вообще спасибо

  • @frankclarke6651
    @frankclarke6651 3 года назад +1

    Kia ora Julie great pronunciation of te reo Maori. 👍👍👍

  • @manuelfavid9221
    @manuelfavid9221 4 года назад +1

    Hello! I really like your videos, you are doing great job. Can not wait for new ones haha
    May I ask where are you from?
    Good luck with your channel

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  4 года назад +3

      I'm from Latvia ☺️ and the new video is coming next week (hopefully) 🤞🏻

  • @johntaylor9320
    @johntaylor9320 4 года назад +3

    Thanks Miss Julie. You are so beautiful and I love to hear you talk.

  • @jessepriest2883
    @jessepriest2883 3 года назад

    Awesome video! One thing, the consonants ng and wh are digraphs, not diphthongs. Diphthongs are when 2 vowels come together in 1 syllable. A digraph is a pair of characters representing one sound. Keep the videos coming please!

  • @delmarae100
    @delmarae100 4 года назад +2

    2 brothers of Alien Weaponry are of Maori descent.

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  4 года назад +1

      thank you for correcting! they do have a Māori ancestry, I should have mentioned that ☺️

  • @MA-gn5nl
    @MA-gn5nl 3 года назад +1

    I learned so much about Maori; beautiful video! Please do Hawaiian (‘Ōlelo Hawaiʻi) one day!

  • @MarkJNewton
    @MarkJNewton 4 года назад +1

    New Zealand is by far my favourite country so I really enjoyed this video. I agree, Maori in Metal is fierce! Keep these videos coming! 💪
    ps. Gabbi was not a happy kitty! Definitely plenty of mana there 😅😾

    • @JuLingo
      @JuLingo  4 года назад

      Glad you enjoyed! New video next week hopefully 🤞🏻

  • @ge7sur3nka34
    @ge7sur3nka34 Год назад +1

    4:46 this is a general rule in many of austronesian languages. And this sentence 5:28 if translated into my language(mori language) is "Ku kite o i kiwi" . Btw maori is a part of "lima" gang 🖐

    • @merlin5420
      @merlin5420 Год назад

      5 is God’s favourite number 😎

  • @gentity8589
    @gentity8589 3 года назад +2

    Her voice sounds beautiful.

  • @maapauu4282
    @maapauu4282 Год назад

    Small correction, we actually arrived around the beginning of the first millennium CE