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Maori

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Akao
aka FailArtist
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 Message 1 of 8
23 April 2010 at 8:51pm | IP Logged 
I don't really know much about Maori, can someone tell me about it?

Edit by mrhenrik: moved to Specific Languages.

Edited by mrhenrik on 10 August 2010 at 1:04pm

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Euphorion
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 Message 2 of 8
03 June 2010 at 2:16pm | IP Logged 
Here's a good article: Maori language

Of course it's wikipedia ;)
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Aquila123
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 Message 3 of 8
10 August 2010 at 10:16am | IP Logged 
Maori is a polynesian language, which pwerhaps are the easiest languages in the world.

If you want to learn a language just for fun and without hard work, these languages are perhaps the right choise.
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DaisyMaisy
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 Message 4 of 8
12 August 2010 at 5:23am | IP Logged 
This is interesting, Aquila. What makes Polynesian languages so easy? I must admit I know little about them.
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dinguino
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 Message 6 of 8
20 February 2014 at 8:46pm | IP Logged 
Aquila123 wrote:
Maori is a polynesian language, which pwerhaps are the easiest languages in the world.

If you want to learn a language just for fun and without hard work, these languages are perhaps the right choise.


I would not say so. Polynesian languages are very exotic to European ears, in terms of vocabulary as well as grammar. Many of them have very few letters - you might know of the Hawaiian (?) alphabet which consists of not more than 13 phonems. With 13 phonems imagine all the possible mistakes and the confusion, as all the words seem to sound the same, in case you are not used to hearing it.
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Medulin
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 Message 7 of 8
21 February 2014 at 6:49pm | IP Logged 
The problem with Maori is similar to the Irish one: not even native population can speak it (except for a handful of words). In New Zealand, knowing Mandarin or Japanese is more helpful than knowing Maori, when it comes to business opportunities. The role of Maori in NZ is purely symbolic, unfortunately. It's not seen as essential to the Kiwi culture (unlike Welsh in Wales or Guarani in Paraguay).

Edited by Medulin on 21 February 2014 at 6:50pm

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Stolan
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 Message 8 of 8
23 February 2014 at 6:06am | IP Logged 
To Aquila.
Modernly spoken Austronesian languages are quite straightforward due to the history of those peoples.
Subjugation of other people during their migrations and such.
The lack of phonemes is interesting, but I also think their ease also comes from modern day simplification, the less
written (like Marshallese) the more irregular and specific the grammar is.
To Medulin.
Many kids relearning their ancestral language simplify it greatly to add. Modern Greenlandic is that for the same
reason, numerous vowel lengthening and consonant change rules, grammatical indication, and different plurality
suffixes are generalized into one declination, and the dual number has died off in some dialects too.

Example: http://books.google.com/books?id=pWw6AAAAQBAJ&printsec=front cover#v=onepage&q&f=false
check out page 176 for what I mean.

Edited by Stolan on 23 February 2014 at 6:11am



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