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Historical loan words

Filters

Idioms

Phrases

Proverbs

Loan words

Historical loan words

kakī

1. (noun) black stilt, Himantopus novaezelandiae - a rare native stilt. Adult bird is entirely black with long pinkish-red legs and a very fine black bill.

kakī

1. (noun) neck.

Nā, i tōna taenga atu ki raro i tētahi pari, e tūpou haere atu ana hoki ia, e kuhu haere ana hoki mā raro i te ururua, ka rongo ake ia i te haruru nui, kāore i taro, ehara, kua mau ngā matihao o tētahi kurī ki tōna kakī me te ngunguru mai hoki o taua kurī nei (TWMNT 22/6/1875:175). / Now, when he reached the bottom of a cliff, and he was stooped over as he entered the undergrowth by foot, he heard a loud noise, and before long, low and behold, an animal caught his neck with its claws and it was growling.

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Synonyms: tākakī, ua, porokakī


2. (noun) throat.

Hohonu kakī, pāpaka uaua (W 1071:92). / Deep throat, shallow muscles. (A whakataukī for a lazy person who eats a lot.)

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mokowhiti kakī

1. (noun) carotid pulse.

kakī mārō

1. (verb) to be obstinate, intractable, inflexible, unbending, obdurate, pig-headed, stubborn, dogmatic, unyielding.

Ahakoa i kakī mārō, i whakatenetene ētahi o ngā ngārahu ahurei o Tūhoe, nā te wahapū, nā te manawanui ka hinga mai i a ia ki tana take (TTR 1994:115). / Despite some of the prominent leaders of Tūhoe being obstinate and reluctant, he swayed them with his eloquence and determination.

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2. (modifier) obstinate, intractable, inflexible, unbending, obdurate, pig-headed, stubborn, dogmatic, unyielding.

I whakahē a Āpirana Ngata i te rironga o te whakahaere o te hokowhitu Māori i a Awatere, nā te mea hoki he tangata kakī mārō rite tonu ki ōna tīpuna (TTR 2000:10). / Āpirana Ngata had opposed Awatere's taking command of the Māori Battalion because he had a of a stubborn streak like his ancestors.

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Synonyms: taringa pākura, whakaioio, houkeke, upoko mārō, hōkeke, mōtohe, taumārō, whakaturi, tohetohe, turi, ngana, makiki, kōioio, whakatete, whakatohe, whātuturi, hoi, kōroiroi, pukutohe, pūkeke, papamārō, whakatuturi, pake, pukutohetohe


3. (noun) stubborn person, pig-headed person, stubborn fellow.

Kore rawa tērā kakī mārō e whakaae mai ki tā tātou tono. / That stubborn fellow will never ever agree to our request.

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tangai kakī

1. (noun) cervical vertebrae.

mau kakī

1. (noun) neck ornament, neck pendant.

Mahia mai ai he hei, he mau kakī, aha atu i ngā kōiwi (Te Ara 2016). / Pendants, necklaces and other things were made from the bones.

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Synonyms: whakakai, tāhei

huruhuru kakī

1. (noun) mane (of a horse).

kakī mohokura

1. (noun) deceptive person, devious person, deceitful person, conniving person.

Kia tūpato ki tēnā tangata – he kakī mohokura, he māminga (HJ 2017:62). / Be careful of that person – he's a conniver, and is fork-tongued.

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manawa kakī

1. carotid pulse.

hiku whēkau kakī

1. (noun) appendicitus.

pōutoa te kakī

1. to cut off the head, decapitate, behead.

Te taenga mai o Pātara me tōna ope ki Ōpōtiki, i kī ia, me i rokohanga e ia a Te Wākana ki reira, kua patua, kua poutoa te kakī, kia mauria ai te upoko ki Taranaki, ki a Te Ua (TP 6/1911:3). / When Pātara and his party reached Ōpōtiki he said that if he came across Völkner he would kill him, behead him and take the head to Taranaki, to Te Ua.

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ā o te kakī

1. (noun) collar bone, clavical.

He pukupuku ētahi kei runga ake o te ā o te kakī (TTT 1/8/1929:1053). / Some are lumps above the collar bone.

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ia-auraki kakī

1. (noun) jugular vein.

Hei whakahoki te ia-auraki kakī i te toto hāora-kore mai i te upoko ki te manawa (RP 2009:351). / The jugular vein is to return deoxygenated blood from the head to the heart.

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tane o te kakī

1. (noun) Adam's apple - lump at the front of the throat.

Ka toro te ringa o te pēpē ki te tane o te kakī o tana pāpā (PK 2008:844). / The baby stretched out her hand to the Adam's apple of her father.

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Hōhonu kakī pāpaku uaua

1. Says too much but does not do enough.

Deep throat shallow words. /

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