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Technology Simplified — Solutions That Work

Te Reo Māori for Absolute Beginners • Lesson 7 of 8

Kei Hea?

Where is it?
Learn to say here and there, describe where objects are, ask where someone is going and follow simple directions.

Lesson progress: 7 of 8

Whāinga AkoLearning goals

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

Say here and there

Choose konei, konā or korā according to distance.

Describe position

Say that something is on, under, inside, outside, in front or behind.

Ask about movement

Recognise the difference between kei hea? and ki hea?

Respect places

Understand that place names and local spaces carry histories and tikanga.

Learn complete patterns: Location words follow particles such as kei, ki and i. Listen to the whole phrase before repeating it.

Here, There and Over There

The correct word depends on the place’s relationship to the speaker and listener.

Kei konei

It is here, near the speaker

Kei konā

It is there, near the listener

Kei korā

It is over there, away from both
Picture three zones: konei is with me, konā is with you, and korā is distant from both of us.

Ngā Kupu Tūwāhi

Location words. Use them in the pattern Kei [position] i te [object].

WordMeaningExampleListen
rungaabove / on topKei runga i te tēpu.It is on the table.
rarobelow / underneathKei raro i te tūru.It is under the chair.
rotoinsideKei roto i te pouaka.It is inside the box.
wahooutsideKei waho o te whare.It is outside the house.
muain frontKei mua i te whare.It is in front of the house.
muribehindKei muri i te rākau.It is behind the tree.
tahaside / besideKei te taha o te tatau.It is beside the door.

Where Is the Object?

Ask with Kei hea?, then answer with a position phrase.

Kei hea te pukapuka?
Where is the book?
Kei runga i te tēpu.
It is on the table.
Kei hea te pēke?
Where is the bag?
Kei raro i te tūru.
It is under the chair.

Kei Hea?, Ki Hea?, Nō Hea?

The particle changes the kind of location question.

Kei hea a Hana?
Where is Hana? — current location
Kei te kāinga a Hana.
Hana is at home.
Kei te haere koe ki hea?
Where are you going? — destination
Kei te haere ahau ki te kāinga.
I am going home.
Nō hea koe?
Where are you from? — origin or belonging
Nō Ōpononi ahau.
I am from Ōpononi.

Simple Directions

Listen to each instruction, then move or point in the correct direction.

Haere whakamua.
Go forward.
Huri ki te mauī.
Turn left.
Huri ki te matau.
Turn right.
Haere ki waho.
Go outside.

A Short Conversation

Read the English directly beneath each line, then practise both parts.

A
Aroha mai, kei hea te wharepaku?Excuse me, where is the toilet?
B
Kei roto i te whare.It is inside the building.
A
Kei hea tonu?Where exactly?
B
Kei te taha o te tatau.It is beside the door.

He Wāhi, He Ingoa

A place and a name. Māori place names can carry histories, relationships and knowledge of the whenua.

Coastal landscape at Ōpononi in the Hokianga, Aotearoa
Ōpononi, Hokianga. Keep the macron, learn the local pronunciation and avoid guessing what a place name means.

Tikanga: Knowing Where You Are

Location is practical, but every place also has people, histories and appropriate ways of behaving.

Follow your hosts

On a marae or in a new community space, ask where to go and follow the guidance of hau kāinga or the people responsible.

Respect boundaries

Some rooms, sites or areas may not be open to visitors. A direction is not permission to enter every space.

Honour place names

Use the correct name and macrons. Ask local people for pronunciation and meaning rather than inventing an explanation.

Whakarongo, Nuku, Kōrero

Listen, move and speak. Practise with objects in the room.

  1. Three zones: point to places that match konei, konā and korā.
  2. Move an object: place a book on, under and beside a chair, describing each position.
  3. Ask and answer: take turns asking Kei hea?
  4. Choose the particle: decide whether each question needs kei hea, ki hea or nō hea.
  5. Follow directions: practise forward, left, right and outside safely.

Knowledge Check

Open each question after choosing your answer.

1. Which word means “here, near the speaker”?

Konei, as in Kei konei.

2. How do you say, “It is under the chair”?

Kei raro i te tūru.

3. Which question asks about a destination?

Ki hea? means “where to?”

4. What does “Huri ki te mauī” mean?

Turn left.

5. Why should you ask before entering an unfamiliar area?

Because places can have boundaries and tikanga, and a visitor should follow the guidance of hosts or responsible people.

Lesson Completion Checklist

I know konei, konā and korā.
I can use at least six position words.
I can ask where an object is.
I know the difference between kei hea and ki hea.
I can follow simple directions.
I understand why local guidance and place names matter.
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ITIAN Knowledge Hub — Kei Hea?Lesson 7 of Te Reo Māori for Absolute Beginners