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As a teacher, he wrote language instruction books on Cook Islands Māori.
Papa'a has a similar meaning in Cook Islands Māori.
An approximate translation of the name from Cook Islands Māori is "looking after our heritage".
These dialects of the Cook Islands Māori are :
A species can be searched in Latin, English, or Cook Islands Māori.
Cook Islands Māori.
The name means "Two Harbors" in Cook Islands Māori.
Cook Islands Māori became an official language of the Cook Islands in 2003.
Donnelly was a speaker of Cook Islands Māori, unlike most Foreign Affairs diplomats.
Some Pacific community programmes are broadcast in Cook Islands Māori, Niuean and Fijian.
From 1983 to 1987 he had responsibility for the Archdiocesan Youth Ministry and the Cook Islands Māori Community.
Strickland was of Cook Islands Māori, Te Tai Tokerau heritage.
However, the word 'auraka' in Cook Islands Māori is a prohibitive adverb, with the approximate meaning 'do not'; it does not mean 'all-devouring'.
The word is similar to the word "kia orana" found in some Pacific Island languages, such as Cook Islands Māori, having a similar meaning.
Cognate words are found in Moriori, Tahitian, Cook Islands Māori, Tuamotuan, Marquesan and Hawaiian.
The languages of the Cook Islands include English, Cook Islands Māori, or "Rarotongan," and Pukapukan.
In Cook Islands Māori, the macron or mākarōna is not commonly used in writing, but is used in references and teaching materials for those learning the language.
The giant clam (Tridacna gigas), known as pā'ua in Cook Islands Māori, is a clam that is the largest living bivalve mollusk.
Akava'ine is a Cook Islands Māori word which has come, since the 2000s, to refer to transgender people of Māori descent from the Cook Islands.
Talofa echoes in such phrases as ta'alofa in Tuvalu, aloha in Hawaiian and aro'a in Cook Islands Māori.
The school offers Māori, Cook Islands Māori, Tongan, Samoan, Niuean, and Indian/Fijian clubs.
Cook Islands Māori share many ancestral links with the Māori of New Zealand and the native people (Mā'ohi) of French Polynesia.
Cook Islanders or Cook Islands Māori are residents of the Cook Islands, which is composed of 15 islands and atolls in Polynesia in the Pacific Ocean.
Well over 90 percent of Cook Islanders are either of full or partial descent of the native Polynesian people of the islands, who are known as Cook Islands Māori.
Avarua (meaning "Two Harbors" in Cook Islands Māori) is a town and district in the north of the island of Rarotonga, and is the national capital of the Cook Islands.