Te Ika a Maui (the fish of maui)
The Maori name for the North Island of New Zealand is Te Ika-a-Māui, which translates to "The Fish of Māui." Māui is a significant figure in Maori mythology.
The Maori name for the North Island in New Zealand is Te Ika-a-Māui.
The Maori name for the North Island of New Zealand is Te Ika-a-Māui. This name translates to "The Fish of Maui" in English, referring to the legend of Maui, a demigod who fished the North Island from the ocean.
The Maori name for the South Island of New Zealand is Te Waipounamu.
The Maori name for the South Island in New Zealand is Te Waipounamu, which translates to "the waters of greenstone."
The Māori name for the South Island of New Zealand is Te Waipounamu.
The Maori name for the North Island in New Zealand is Te Ika-a-Māui.
The old Maori name for the North Island is Te Ika-a-Maui.
Maui.
Rakiura.
Aotearoa is the Maori name for New Zealand. It originally meant only what is now known as the North Island, but is becoming more recognized internationally as the bilingual (English/Maori) name of New Zealand. In an 1878 Maori translation of the national anthem God Defend New Zealand, Aotearoa was used in place of New Zealand. This translation remains in use.
The Māori name for the South Island of New Zealand is Te Waipounamu.
Te Rauparaha
The Maori name "Aotearoa" means "Land of the Long White Cloud." It reflects the country's geographic features, specifically the long white clouds often seen over the islands. The name has cultural significance to the Maori people, who were the original inhabitants of New Zealand.
Maui was the fisherman who fished up the North Island, hence its Maori name of 'te ika a Maui'. = the fish of Maui. [Patu please expand]
The Maori name for the South Island of New Zealand is Te Waipounamu.
New Zealand's Maori name is Aotearoa, "The land of the long white cloud". Is this what you were after?
Maori (New Zealand); Cherokee (North America); Australian aborigine