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Te Whakaipurangi Rauemi - High frequency words

Resources for teachers promoting language learning and supporting Te Aho Arataki Marau mō te Ako i Te Reo Māori - Kura Auraki and Te Reo Māori in the Māori language curriculum.

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Tags

  • AudienceKaiako
  • Education SectorPrimary
  • Level of SupportSelf directed
  • Progression rangeYears 4-6
  • Resource LanguageEnglish
  • Resource typeCollection/Curriculum Guide
  • Types of SupportKnowledge

About this resource

These 1000 high frequency words support the use of Te Aho Arataki Marau mō te Ako i Te Reo Māori - Kura Auraki and Te Reo Māori in the Māori language curriculum.

This resource is part of the set "Te Whakaipurangi Rauemi". See the resource carousel below for more.

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Te Whakaipurangi Rauemi - High frequency words 

In Māori, the 360 or so most frequent words are important because they make up a large proportion of anything that you hear or read in Māori. 

Added to these high frequency words are the specific topic words for any particular text. These are words that occur quite often in text because of what they are about but may not be as generally common in the language. 

Ākonga need to know the high frequency words and their meanings to easily understand the texts they hear and read.  

The high frequency vocabulary is presented here in two ways as reference material for teachers: 

  • A list in alphabetical order of 1000 high frequency words. Use this list if you want to find out the more frequent meanings of these words, and whether or not a particular word is among the 1000 most frequent words of Māori. Some of these 1000 words are also marked with an asterisk (*). These are very frequent words, words that each occur 200 times or more in theCorpus of Māori Texts for Children. See Materials that come with this resource to download 1000 frequent words of Māori in alphabetical order (.doc)  
  • A list in frequency order of those same 1000 words, in descending order of frequency, with the most frequent word (te) at the top of the list. Use this list if you want to find out approximately how frequent a word is within the 1000 words, and therefore how important it is for your ākonga to know that word and its frequent meanings. The nearer the top of the list, the more frequently the word is used. See Materials that come with this resource to download 1000 frequent words of Māori in frequency order (.doc)  

The 360 or so most frequent words – those that occur more than 200 times each in the corpus – are important for learners of Māori, but all of these 1000 words occur relatively frequently. 

The lists are corpus-based 

These lists are based on two collections of spoken or written texts in Māori: the Corpus of Māori Texts for Children (MTC), compiled by Huia Publishers; and the Māori Broadcast Corpus (MBC), a one million-word representative corpus of broadcast material, recorded off-air in the mid-1990s, compiled by Mary Boyce. 

To identify the words for inclusion in the 1000 list, the two lists were compared to yield a list of high frequency words that were common to both. Proper nouns such as the names of people, places, days of the week, and months of the year were removed from the list. Next, the words that were in the MTC high frequency list but not in the MBC list were examined one by one to see if there was a good reason to include them in the final list. 

Each word on the list was then examined using the information on their use in MTC. This identified the higher frequency meanings that were to be added to the list that is given here in alphabetical order. Some words are more common in MTC because they are useful in the education context. One example of this is the word ‘ine’ (to measure), which is not common in the MBC but comparatively frequent in the MTC. It is therefore included in the list. 

Function words 

Some of the most frequent words in Māori, as in other languages, are function or grammar words; these include words like te, i, ki, a, mā, and ō. Rather than carrying a specific meaning, they may indicate the relationships between the phrases and clauses in sentences. It can be difficult to provide a simple meaning in English for these function words. Sometimes there is no equivalent English word.

For each of the function words in the alphabetical list, a short description is given of their function, and a reference has been given to Harlow (2001), where more detailed information can be found. Harlow’s book covers the main aspects of Māori grammar and is a good tool for Māori language teachers who will have occasion to explain aspects of the structure of te reo Māori to their ākonga in the ‘focus on form’ part of their programmes, that is, when they focus on grammar. (See the list of references for other descriptions of Māori grammar; see Nation, 1996: 36–37 for the four main strands of a language course.)

Another source of information on function words is Huia’s Te Kete Kupu: 300 Essential Words in Māori. This book provides examples of the major uses of 300 very frequent words in Māori, including function words. These examples are in the form of sentences taken from Māori texts written for young children to read. The examples are all in Māori, with no English.

Content words

Content words are those that carry the main meaning in an utterance or sentence. Some examples of content words in Māori are: aroha, whare, waiata, haere, mahi, kōrero, pango, iti, riri, whakaaro, and marae.

In the alphabetical list, the more frequent meanings of the content words are given. The less frequent meanings are not listed but can be found in dictionaries. The less frequent meanings can be learned at a later time once the frequent meanings are well established.

If you want to find definitions of words written in Māori, use Huia’s Tirohia Kimihia. This will help you explain the meanings of words in Māori to your ākonga, rather than always translating everything into English.

In the alphabetical list, some words are spelled the same but have more than one meaning. The word is listed separately for each of those meanings. Only the more frequent meanings are included. 

Word formation 

There are a number of common, regular affixes (or word parts) that can be added to the stem form of words in Māori to make other forms of the word. Affixes that are added to the beginning of a word are called prefixes. Two common prefixes in Māori are whaka- and kai-. Affixes that are added to the end of the word are called suffixes. Two common suffixes in Māori are the passive suffix and the nominal suffix. 

The passive suffix and the nominal suffix in Māori can each take several forms 

Examples of passive and nominal suffixes in different forms.

Harlow (2001: pp. 127,129) gives a full list of passive suffixes.

Stem form 

with passive suffix 

with nominal suffix 

wehe 

wehea 

wehenga 

kōrero 

kōrerotia 

kōrerotanga 

tau 

tauria 

tauranga 

tiro 

tirohia 

tirohanga 


Prefixes and suffixes add elements of meaning to a word 

If you know the common meanings of the stem form and the effect on the meaning of the word when you add a particular affix, you can usually work out the meaning of the new word quite easily.

Example: Look at the frequent word mahi and add prefixes and suffixes to it.

Word part 

Word 

Meaning 

stem 

mahi 

to work (also: to do, to make) 

kai- prefix 

kaimahi 

a worker 

whaka- prefix 

whakamahi 

to put someone to work, to operate something 

passive suffix -a 

mahia 

to be working 

nominal suffix -nga 

mahinga 

an instance of work, an exercise 


The words mahi, kaimahi, whakamahi and mahia all appear in the 500 most frequent words in the lists here. Mahinga is less frequent and does not occur within the 1000 most frequent words; it does, however, occur within the 1500 most frequent words in both of the corpora, MTC and MBC. 

Words with the prefix kai - from the 1000 word list:

kaiako 

kaikōrero 

kaimahi 

kaipūtaiao 

kaitākaro 

kaitiaki 

kaituhi 

kaiwhakahaere 


Words with the prefix whaka- from the 1000 word list:

whakaae 

whakaahua 

whakaaro 

whakahaere 

whakahoki 

whakamahi 

whakamārama 

whakamau 

whakamuri 

whakapae 

whakapai 

whakaora 

whakapakari 

whakaputa 

whakatakoto 

whakatūpato 


If your ākonga know the common affixes and the effect they have on the meaning when they are added to a word they already know, they can understand and use a wider range of words quite quickly. 

References 

  • Bauer, W. (with W. Parker, T. K. Evans, and T. A. N. Teepa).(1997). The Reed Reference Grammar of Māori. Auckland: Reed. 
  • Biggs, B. (1969). Let’s Learn Māori: a Guide to the Study of the Māori Language. Wellington: A. W. and A. H. Reed. 
  • Boyce, M. T. (2006). A corpus of modern spoken Māori. Unpublished PhD thesis available in the library at Victoria University of Wellington. 
  • Harlow, R. (2001). A Māori Reference Grammar. Auckland: Longman. 
  • Head, L. (1989). Making Māori Sentences. Auckland: Longman Paul. 
  • Huia. (2006). Tirohia Kimihia: A Māori Learner Dictionary. Wellington: Huia Publishers. 
  • Huia. (2006). Te Kete Kupu: 300 Essential Words in Māori. Wellington: Huia Publishers. 
  • Nation, I. S. P. (2001). Learning Vocabulary in Another Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  • Nation, I. S. P. (1996). Language Curriculum Design. Wellington: English Language Institute Occasional Publication No. 16. School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies, Victoria University of Wellington. 
  • Williams, H. W. (1975). A Dictionary of the Māori Language. Wellington: Government Printer.