te-reo-maori-absolute-beginners-course
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ITIAN Short Course • Absolute Beginner
Te Reo Māori for Absolute Beginners
Begin your reo journey with clear pronunciation guidance, practical everyday phrases and respectful explanations of tikanga. No previous experience is needed.
A Welcoming First Step into Te Reo Māori
Eight manageable lessons help you listen, repeat, read and use simple reo with growing confidence.
Language, Whenua and Aotearoa
Te reo Māori connects people, identity, history and the living landscapes of Aotearoa.
What You Will Learn
By the end of the course, you will have practical foundations for continuing your learning.
Pronunciation
Recognise Māori vowel sounds, long vowels, macrons, “ng” and “wh”.
Greetings
Use common greetings, acknowledgements and farewells respectfully.
Introductions
Say your name and give a simple, appropriate beginner introduction.
Everyday Kōrero
Ask and answer a few useful questions in a short conversation.
Course Lessons
Work through the lessons in order. Each lesson adds a small set of sounds, words and sentence patterns.
Ngā OroSounds and pronunciation
Meet the Māori alphabet, vowels, macrons, “ng” and “wh”.
Start Lesson 1Ngā MihiGreetings and farewells
Practise greetings for one person, two people and groups.
Ko Wai Au?Introducing yourself
Say your name and ask another person’s name.
Ngā TauNumbers from one to ten
Learn tahi through tekau and practise number patterns.
Tōku WhānauPeople and whānau
Build beginner vocabulary for family and people.
He PātaiSimple questions and answers
Ask how someone is and respond simply.
Kei Hea?Places and directions
Use beginner words for familiar places and locations.
He Kōrero MāmāA simple conversation
Bring greetings, questions and farewells together.
Beginner Phrases
Select Listen beside each phrase. The English meaning appears immediately underneath.
Tikanga and Respectful Learning
Language and culture belong together. These principles help beginners learn with care.
Te reo Māori is a taonga
Treat the language as a treasured living language. Listen, practise sincerely and welcome correction.
Names and macrons matter
A macron marks a long vowel and can affect meaning. Make a genuine effort with people’s names and place names.
Follow local guidance
Reo and tikanga can vary between iwi and rohe. Listen to mana whenua and never claim whakapapa or copy a pepeha that is not yours.
Ready to Begin?
Start with the sounds of te reo Māori and take one confident step at a time.
