If you're looking for the Maori - English translation, it means
'Maoi Language Week'
If you actually wanted to know what it is...it's just an occasion, mainly just celebrated by New Zealand. We celebrate Maori language/culture/ect the whole week...There are special competitions nationwide, the weather is in Maori, schools take a good focus on it, they sometimes have small segments of 'Maoriness' on TV programmes too lol, like the big popular NZ soaps and that :)
:)
o = of te reo maori = (the) maori language
korerotiamai te reo, whaka rongomai ki te reo, noreira ra, korerotiamai te reo, i nga waa o mua o nga tupuna e korerotiamai he reo, te reo rangatira, ka pakia ae nga ngutu o nga matua, ratou e korero ana i to tatau reo, korerotiamai te reo whaka rongomai ki te reo, koenei te taonga i waihotia mai ratou, he taonga aroha, he taonga wairua, noreira ra korerotiamai te reo, korerotiamai e homaa, i te marae i te kohanga, tautoko tia mai koutou i tenei kaupapa, spoken;; he taonga whakamiri tenei,he taonga rangatira hoki, tairangatia ae te reo, kia kaha kia rongo naa,' hapaitia', hapaitia te reo, ki runga rawa e, he taonga tenei o nga tupuna, he taonga aroha, he taonga wairua, noreira ra, korerotiamai te reo, noreira ra korerotiamai te reo, noreira ra, korerotiamai te reo, noreira tena koutou, tena koutou, tena koutou katoa, ka huri. ;;;; arohanui, selwyn rawiri, the kaupapa of this waiata, was when our parents and their parents whent to school in their days, they were punished for speaking their language at school, so now the wairua of our tupuna cry out! speak the language of our people, speak it with pride, its a gift of love, a gift of spirit, noreira ra korerotiamai te reo.
The Maori name for the Treaty of Waitangi is "Te Tiriti o Waitangi."
In Maori, you would say "te rarawa o te putiputi".
Ko te tihi o te puia
Whitinga o te raa.
Ki te ingoa o te Matua, o te Tamaiti, o te Wairua Tapu. Āmene.
The Maori name for Coromandel is Te Tara-o-te-ika-a-Māui, which translates to "the barb of Māui's fish."
Taumāhekeheke o te Ao.
Iwi Maori means the Maori Tribes. There are many 'tribes' of people in NZ who descend from a common ancestor and/or come from a common waka (one of the canoes which brought the original maori to NZ from their homeland - Hawaiiki). Some of the most well-known Iwi (tribes) are: Nga Puhi, Ngati Whatua, Tainui, Te Arawa, Tuhoe, Ngati Porou, Te Ati Awa, Kai Tahu...
he aha te kiri o tera
Tuawe O Te Moeka