In Māori, a person staying would say "E noho rā" to say goodbye.
Haere Ra(farewell).
In Maori, "goodbye" is "haere rā" and "good luck" is "kia kaha."
E noho rā Goodbye (from a person leaving)Hei konā rā Goodbye (less formal)
In a letter, you can say "Nāku noa, nā" which means "Yours sincerely."
The Maori for Hello to one person is 'Tena koe'. 'Kia Ora' is an informal greeting ..It is also used to say 'Thank you'...Kia Ora.
Haere Ra(farewell).
In Maori, "goodbye" is "haere rā" and "good luck" is "kia kaha."
E noho rā Goodbye (from a person leaving)Hei konā rā Goodbye (less formal)
E noho rā Goodbye (from a person leaving)Hei konā rā Goodbye (less formal)
Loho Fua if u are leaving you say= NOFO A if u are staying and the other person is leaving u say = 'ALU A so if u say (nofo a), the person that is staying will say (alu a)
E noho ra (written as three separate words) means goodbye to someone you are leaving. I.e, you are leaving your nana's house, and she is staying at her house, but you are going somewhere else, then you would say 'e noho ra.' If you were staying and you were saying goodbye to someone who is leaving then you would say, "Haere ra." Other ways of saying goodbye are hei konei ra, or ka kite ano (see you again).
In a letter, you can say "Nāku noa, nā" which means "Yours sincerely."
This depends on whether or not the person you're saying goodbye to is staying or leaving:Staying: 안녕히계세요 (annyeong geseyo)Leaving: 안녕히가세요 (annyeong gaseyo)Alternatively, if you know the person well (friend/family), you can just say안녕 (annyeong).
People in New Zealand speak English and say "goodbye" as you do. If you mean how do you say goodbye in the Maori Language, then it is "Haere Ra".
E noho ra, Hei konei ra, or Ka kite ano - I'm unsure of whether the spelling in those words is correct or not, but that's definitely the right terminology.To say goodbye in Maori:"Haere ra" - say to someone who is leaving."E noho ra" - say to someone who is staying."Ka kite ano i a koe" ( I'll see you again) - say to one person."Ka kite ano i a korua" (I;ll see you again) - say to two people."ka kite ano i a koutou" (I'll see you again) - say to three or more people.(this is often shortened colloquially to "ka kite ano" or even "ka Kite).
you can just say "Annyeong", but a more polite way is to say "Annyeongi gyeseyo" if you are the person leaving, or "Annyeongi gaseyo" if youre the one staying.
To say goodbye, you rub your hands under your armpits and wipe it on the person's cheeks that your saying goodbye to.