Maori is the plural of Maori.
"mokopuna" = "grandchild" plural "grandchildren" = "Nga mokopuna"
Maori are the native people of the country of Aotearoa or New Zealand. The plural is also Maori (there is no such word as Maoris) - one Maori, two Maori, many Maori etc.
Nga Hu (plural)Te Hu (singular)
Money in Maori is moni.
"Naka" is not a Maori word. It does not have a meaning in Maori language.
Kiwi is a Maori word, and in the Maori language, there is no 's'. Therefore, the plural is actually kiwi, a word for two or more birds.The plural form of the noun 'kiwi', the fruit, is kiwis.
"mokopuna" = "grandchild" plural "grandchildren" = "Nga mokopuna"
panata is the Maori word for Pantha. I believe the word stays the same for both singular and plural words.
Maori are the native people of the country of Aotearoa or New Zealand. The plural is also Maori (there is no such word as Maoris) - one Maori, two Maori, many Maori etc.
Nga Hu (plural)Te Hu (singular)
Ngā kaiako. Kaiako = teacher. 'Ngā' is used in a plural context. 'Te' is used in a singular context.
'Kiwi' is the plural and the singular (there is no 's' in Maori). 'Te kiwi' means 'the kiwi' (singular), 'Nga Kiwi' means 'the kiwi' (plural) and 'he kiwi' means 'a kiwi' or 'some kiwi'.
No. If you aren't Maori you can still be in the Maori party.
maori laws are the laws created for the maori
Money in Maori is moni.
"Naka" is not a Maori word. It does not have a meaning in Maori language.
The Maori word for child is tamaraki, when reffering to numerous children it is nga tamaraki (nga meaning plural) or te tamariki (te meaning the or singular), when you refer to a boy or girl this is different again, boy is tama & girl is kotiro so all depends how you wish to say it