- MAORI
- New Zealand people in the movie "Whale Rider"
- Official language of New Zealand, along with NZ Sign Language and English
- New Zealand native
- Language of New Zealand
- New Zealander
- Austronesian language
- Tattooed New Zealand native
- Kiwi from New Zealand
- Language whose name means "normal"
- Native New Zealanders
- Language in which "kia ora" is "hello"
- Native Kiwi
- Language in Polynesia
- N.Z. aborigine
- New Zealand tribesman
- Polynesian tongue
- Language whos name means "native"
- People of New Zealand
- Cook Islands folk
- Polynesian New Zealander
- Native New Zealander
- New Zealand minority
- Like about 15% of New Zealanders
- Language in the same family as Tuvaluan
- Natives who signed the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi
- South Island native
- Ngaio Marsh's extraction
- Language spoken in "The Piano"
- The Piano extra
- New Zealand aborigine
- Tiki carver of New Zealand
- New Zealand tongue
- Indigenous New Zealander
- Indigenous Kiwi
- Indigenous people of New Zealand
- Language that gave us "kiwi"
- Language that gave us the word "kiwi"
- Native Cook Islanders
- Polynesian settlers of New Zealand
- Ki-o-rahi player, traditionally
- Te reo ___ (language spoken in New Zealand)
- Once Were Warriors people
- Language from which we got "kiwi" and "mako"
- Cook Island native
- Polynesian
- Polynesian, perhaps
- Whale Rider extra
- Haka dancers of New Zealand
- Soprano Kiri Te Kanawa, e.g.
- Polynesian language
- Hei-tiki wearers
- One of New Zealand's official languages
- Early New Zealand settler
- Those who call New Zealand "Aotearoa"
- New Zealand settler
- Polynesian people
- Haka dancers
- Cook Islands language
- Disney's "Moana" was translated into it
- People who call New Zealand "Aotearoa"
- Like ta moko and the haka
- Language of a haka chant
- Tasman greeter
- Aboriginal New Zealander
- Kiwi hunter
- Certain New Zealander
- Oceania language
- New Zealand official language
- Language related to Tahitian
- New Zealand language
- Some New Zealanders
- Language related to Hawaiian
- Most Cook Islanders
- In which "aroha" means "love"
- I wander, backing New Zealander (5)
- Language that gave us the words "mako" and "moa"
- Polynesian language of New Zealand
- Whale Rider people
- Polynesian native
- Native of New Zealand.
- Civilized race of New Zealand.
- Native of Wellington, N. Z.
- Citizen of N. Z.
- Aborigine of New Zealand.
- Aborigine from down under.
- Native of Auckland.
- Native of N. Z.
- New Zealand clansman.
- Large-statured Polynesian.
- One of New Zealand's citizens.
- Aborigine of Auckland.
- Relative of a Polynesian.
- Aborigine from Wellington.
- N. Z. native.
- Polynesian language of N. Z.
- Native of North Island.
- Pacific islander.
- N.Z. tribesman.
- Polynesian aborigine.
- N.Z. Polynesian
- Soprano Kanawa is one
- Down Under aborigine
- New Zealand aboriginal
- Polynesian skilled in tattooing
- Soprano Kiri Te Kanawa is one
- Rainbow fish
- A New Zealander
- Hapu member
- N.Z. Polynesian native
- The rainbow fish
- New Zealand denizen
- Polynesian native of N.Z.
- New Zealand minority member
- Otago native
- Soprano Te Kanawa is one
- A Polynesian tongue
- Singer Te Kanawa is one
- Kiri Te Kanawa, for one
- Aucklander, maybe
- Language from which "kiwi" comes
- Language from which "mako" comes
- Early New Zealander
- About 10% of New Zealanders
- Language akin to Tahitian
- In New Zealand, it means "normal"
- They greet each other by pressing their noses together
- Natives encountered by explorer James Cook
- Kapa haka dancer
- Indigenous New Zealanders
- Language known to native speakers as "te reo"
- Natives of the land known as Aotearoa
- Much-tattooed people
- Native Kiwis
- Indigenous people known for their tattoos
- Official New Zealand language besides English
- An official language of New Zealand
- Language of Polynesia
- Source of the word "kiwi"
- Like the haka dance, in origin
- Performers of the ceremonial haka dance
- Language in which "kia ora" is a greeting
- Like one in six New Zealanders, ethnically
- Many a Cook Islander
- Haka dance performers
- Language in which "hello" is "kia ora"
- One of the two official languages of New Zealand
- Like taonga puoro
- Natives who apply ta moko
- People who celebrate Matariki
- People that call New Zealand "Aotearoa"
- Haka performer
- Language from which "kiwi" derives
- The _tangata whenua_ of New Zealand
- A language of New Zealand
- One of Polynesian-Melanesian descent
- Native from New Zealand
- New Zealander of Polynesian descent
- Once Were Warriors folk
- New Zealander in Keri Hulme's "The Bone People"
- New Zealand language that was only oral until the 19th century
- Te Kanawa for one
- Kiri Te Kanawa, e.g.
- Kiwi
- Non-European New Zealander
- A Polynesian language
- New Zealand tongue experiencing a revival
- Like the haka
- New Zealand people
- Like haka performers
- Like whakairo carvings
- Like powhiri ceremonies
- People who speak te reo
- Aotearoa people
- Kiwi Polynesian
- Language that gave us "mako"
- Te Waipounamu people
- Language of many iwi groups
- Language that gives us "kiwi"
- Like the word "kiwi"
- Auckland aborigine
- It's an official language in Wellington
- People whose language is the source of "kiwi"
- Language that "kiwi" comes from
- Their name for New Zealand is Aotearoa
- Language that gives us "tiki" and "kiwi"
- Performers of the haka ceremonial dance