tunu – English Translation – Keybot Dictionary

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Keybot 58 Results  www.teara.govt.nz  Page 7
  1. Ngā taunaki whaipara...  
Ko te tikanga o te tuwhatu he heipū i te mātaitai me te tahu i ngā rarauhe maroke ki runga me ngā taha hoki. Ko te tikanga e kīia ana he kōhue, ka makaia ngā mātatai me ngā kōhatu wera kia tunu ki roto hue.
Sometimes the harvest was cooked in the umu (earth oven). The tuwhatu method involved piling the shellfish in a heap, then burning dry fern on top, or enclosing it with a circle of fire. In the kōhue method, shellfish were placed in a hue (gourd) among hot stones. The shells opened and the liquid that came out was used as a medicine.
  1. Te mahi tāpoi Māori ...  
Ka whakamahia ngā ngāwhā ki te whakaora tangata, te tunu kai, te whakamahana me te horoi. Koinei te āhuatanga i tino kaingākautia e ngā turuhi.
canoe. He was freezing on Mt Tongariro and called out to his sisters to bring fire to New Zealand from Hawaiki, the ancestral homeland. They did, and this is said to be the origin of the geothermal areas.
  Smith, John Burns – Hau...  
Nō te 25 o Hepetema o te tau 1922 i whānau ai a John Burns Smith ki Kaikohe i Te Tai Tokerau, ko ia nei tētahi o ngā tamariki tokotoru a Nīria Tākiwira (Dargaville) rāua ko tana tāne, ko Leslie John Smith. He tunu parāoa te mahi a tana pāpā, ā, i tana hokinga mai i te Pakanga Tuatahi o te Ao ka tau nei tana noho ki Kaikohe.
John Burns Smith was born on 25 September 1922 at Kaikohe, Northland, one of three children of Niria Takiwira (Dargaville) and her husband, Leslie John Smith. His father, a baker who had settled in the town after serving in the First World War, had played rugby for South Auckland and represented North Island Country in 1912. His mother belonged to the hapu Te Uri-o-Hua of Nga Puhi, and was from Kaikohe.
  Te Rauparaha – Haurongo...  
Nō muri tata mai i tōna whānautanga, ka patua, ā, ka kainga mai tētahi o ōna whanaunga e tētahi toa o Waikato. Me te whakaweti mai anō o tērā ki te tunu i te tamaiti rā i rō rau rauparaha, hei kai māna.
His name is derived from an edible plant called rauparaha. Soon after he was born a Waikato warrior who had killed and eaten a relation of his threatened to eat the child as well, roasted with rauparaha leaves; the child was called Te Rauparaha in defiance of this threat. The other name by which he was known during his childhood was Maui Potiki, because he, like Maui Potiki, was lively and mischievous. Much of his childhood was spent with his mother's people at Maungatautari, but he may have been instructed at the whare wananga at Kawhia.
  1. Ngā taunaki whaipara...  
Te tunu
Cooking
  Ormsby, John – Haurongo...  
Nāna i whakawhiwhi ōna whanaunga Māori ki ngā mahi whakahaere i te hōtēra, i te wāhi whakapākarukaru kōhatu, i te pūtia, i te tēpara hōiho, i te tari inihua whenua, i te tari whakamāori me te wāhi tunu parāoa; katoa nāna i pou.
Ormsby was equally successful in other spheres of activity. In 1890 the Native Land Court confirmed the Ormsby family's title to 3,161 acres of land at Te Kopua and he began sheepfarming. The land purchase officer in Otorohanga, G. T. Wilkinson, complained that the success of the venture was encouraging other Ngati Maniapoto to retain rather than sell their land, but he was confident that Maori sheepfarming would soon fail. Ormsby went on to help establish the town of Otorohanga. He was chairman of the Otorohanga Town Board and clerk of the first Waitomo County Council, and laid the foundation stone of the town hall. He employed his Maori relatives to manage the hotel, quarry, butchery, livery stables, land insurance and interpretation agency, and the bakery which he established. His farming ventures continued to flourish and he established the first local branch of the New Zealand Farmers' Union. Ormsby refused to act as agent for the Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corporation unless they accepted Maori risk; they relented.
  Smith, John Burns – Hau...  
I haere ia ki te kura o Kaikohe, nō muri mai ki te kura tuarua ā-rohe o Kaikohe (Kaikohe District High School), ā, nō te tau 1935 ki 1937 a ia e tākaro whutupaoro ana mō te tīma tuatahi o te kura. I tana wehenga atu i te kura, i tīmata tana mahi i te whare tunu parāoa o tōna whānau, ā, tūhono atu ana ia ki te karapu whutupaoro o Kaikohe (Kaikohe Rugby Football Club).
Even at school Johnny Smith demonstrated uncanny ability to adapt to any sport. He attended Kaikohe School and then went on to Kaikohe District High School, where he played for the First XV from 1935 to 1937. After leaving school he worked in the family bakery, and linked up with the Kaikohe Rugby Football Club. In 1940 he joined the army. It was while playing in an army match, at Palmerston North in September 1942, that he first commanded the attention of rugby followers outside Northland. He had made his first-class début for the 12th Brigade Group side earlier that year and went on to represent the North Island in August 1943. The following month he appeared for the New Zealand army against the Royal New Zealand Air Force, running 40 yards to score late in the match and help turn an 8–9 deficit into an army victory.
  Smith, John Burns – Hau...  
Nō te tau 1949 i riro i a Johnny Smith te whakahaere o te mahi tunu parāoa a te whānau, ā, nō muri mai he mahi kāmura, pōmana, hī ika anō āna mahi. I ngā tau i muri mai, ka pāngia ia e te mate, inarā te pūtake mai o te nuinga o ōna mate ko te whanatanga i tana mātenga i te wā o te pakanga i tētahi tākaro whutupaoro nei i Itari.
Johnny Smith took over the family bakery around 1949, and later worked as a carpenter, barman and fisherman. He had a number of health problems in later years, many of them developing from a kick to the head during a wartime match in Italy. He also suffered from pituitary gland problems, and for years travelled from Kaikohe to Auckland every three months for treatment. He died at Auckland Hospital on 3 December 1974, survived by Dorothy and his children.
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