How to use "He - Te - Ngā" | MAORI LANGUAGE LESSON FOR BEGINNERS

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  • Опубликовано: 29 окт 2024

Комментарии • 46

  • @grantwhitbourne
    @grantwhitbourne  Год назад

    👋🏽 Kia ora! Welcome to the Starting In Te Reo Maori RUclips Channel ✅✨
    START YOUR FREE GRAMMAR COURSE HERE: bit.ly/grammarbasics
    JOIN THE FACEBOOK COMMUNITY HERE: bit.ly/tereogroup
    LISTEN TO THE PODCAST HERE: bit.ly/tereopodcast
    START THE SELF-PACED COURSE HERE: bit.ly/selfpacedcourse

  • @mikefriend7570
    @mikefriend7570 5 месяцев назад +2

    Ka pai! I’ve just started a Te Reo class and these vids are a fantastic aid to work I’m doing in an immersion class. RESPECT

  • @andrew_veale
    @andrew_veale 7 лет назад +5

    BRO!!!!! Thanks so much for these videos! can you please keep making more of these sentence ones??? Soooo helpful. I especially notice that I struggle when saying a sentence with multiple nouns and or verbs... But more help building sentences would be great! I'm going to work on "he" too, I had a basic understanding of it but this video showed how much more work I need to do! Cheers

    • @grantwhitbourne
      @grantwhitbourne  7 лет назад +2

      +Andrew Veale for sure brother, for sure! Got pleeeenty of more content in the pipeline 😊
      Ngā mihi

  • @NixolotlAM
    @NixolotlAM 4 года назад +4

    thank's bud my dad want's me to learn te-reo maori so you really are helping!

    • @grantwhitbourne
      @grantwhitbourne  4 года назад +1

      Awesome e hoa I'm glad to hear the vids are helping 👌

  • @taniwhared
    @taniwhared 6 лет назад +1

    Grant really appreciate your style of teaching te reo love the explanations and examples simplistic in your delivery

    • @grantwhitbourne
      @grantwhitbourne  6 лет назад

      Kia ora e hoa thanks for commenting... Glad it helps

  • @ruthlessslowelife
    @ruthlessslowelife 3 года назад +1

    You are such a clever teacher . Loving it. Thanks

  • @kiwi007
    @kiwi007 4 года назад +4

    This is very helpful. So, te pukapuka for 1 book, nga pukapuka for more than one. I'm 55 and it is definitely harder learning as you get older! I have just painfully learnt the 1st part of the NZ national anthem. Would be good for a proper breakdown of the words of it.

    • @grantwhitbourne
      @grantwhitbourne  4 года назад

      Glad to hear it's a helpful breakdown. Thanks for the comment 😊

  • @davidwilliammalo
    @davidwilliammalo 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for this!!!

  • @annabarclay4673
    @annabarclay4673 4 года назад +1

    super informative & logical lesson - will use this adjective-noun structure a lot I'm sure

  • @celiacaughey4342
    @celiacaughey4342 3 года назад +1

    Really good explanation thanks!

  • @greengonzonz
    @greengonzonz 5 лет назад +1

    😮 Ae Tino whēuaua 😮thanks Grant, that's a curly one but you've done a great job of explaining it. 👍

  • @luowe11
    @luowe11 2 года назад +2

    He pai te kaiako o te reo Maori.
    Would that be right? 🤔
    Kia ora from Melbourne. New subbie here!

  • @reneeharrison6786
    @reneeharrison6786 3 года назад +1

    Hi, could you explain Te in the greeting “Kia Ora e Te whanau?
    Am just starting my Te Reo journey and would love to understand that, is it saying “the whanau” is confusing me slightly
    Thanks

    • @grantwhitbourne
      @grantwhitbourne  3 года назад

      Rather than think of it as "the whanau", think of "e te" as being a slightly formal way of addressing the next kupu
      E te whanau
      E te rangatira
      E te kaiako

  • @fotographernz305
    @fotographernz305 5 лет назад +1

    Great explanation thanks, so for the first use ‘te’ is the equivalent of the definite article ‘the’ and ‘he’ is the equivalent of the indefinite article ‘a’. And what is the plural of ‘he’ (ie. if you want to say ‘some’ instead of ‘a’)? Or is ‘he’ plural too? Like if you wanted to say ‘some good hats’?

  • @SaadonAksah
    @SaadonAksah 2 года назад

    Hmm we use tu in standard Malay instead of te..but a dialect that I know of did use te 🤔.. but we dont use te (or tu) for definite and indefinite article ..

  • @ukidding
    @ukidding 3 года назад +1

    He kaiako pai - a good teacher. He pai te kaiako - the teacher is good. Homai te kapu- pass me the cup. Hhomai he kapu - pass me a cup

  • @horiink
    @horiink 4 года назад +1

    Kia ora e hoa, does "he pai te atua o te potae" mean the hat looks good? And does that mean I could say "he pai te atua o te potae ra" if I liked a hat on the wall at the shop?

    • @brendorcrooked
      @brendorcrooked 4 года назад

      ahua, not atua

    • @horiink
      @horiink 4 года назад

      @@brendorcrooked bloody autocorrect, so whats the answer to the question

    • @grantwhitbourne
      @grantwhitbourne  4 года назад

      correct

  • @thirtycats
    @thirtycats 2 месяца назад +1

    He nui te kurī.
    He tere te kōtiro
    He mōhio te ngeru
    He kino te ika.

  • @LuvmiFeralDog
    @LuvmiFeralDog 2 года назад +1

    I have ADHD and i am so confused lol oh well, i'll keep trying to understand

  • @ukidding
    @ukidding 3 года назад +1

    kei te oma he kaiako ki te toa. A teacher is running to the store (maybe).

    • @grantwhitbourne
      @grantwhitbourne  3 года назад

      In this case instead of 'he' you would use tētahi

  • @korisx
    @korisx 3 года назад +1

    Damn

  • @Matty_03
    @Matty_03 4 года назад +1

    Ko ka rawe to mahi e hoa. Tena koe cuz