Ahiahi mārie e hoa he pātai pai. Do not take my answer as gospel, and maybe you could also ask those on the Facebook page 'Maori 4 Grown-ups', however I was taught that there is "Kei te oma au" and the present continuous would have an "e oma ana" in it. For example: where is Steve? Kei hea a Steve? Steve is sitting down, singing. Kei noho a Steve, e waiata ana. I can't give you an exact answer to your example but I was just taught that the e ___ ana structure can also be dumped in the middle of a sentence to show an action that is 'present continuous.' I welcome others to help answer your pātai. Kia pai tō rā 😀
i’m pretty sure it’s because when speaking if you say “ahau” fast enough it sort of becomes “au” which is why it’s now an accepted alternate use, it’s like how “going to” and “gonna” mean the same thing in english - one is just a reduced version of the other
Blimmin heck - I've finally got to understand this thanks to your video! Much appreciated!
I'm pretty sure there is an animated light bulb flashing above my head right now - most appreciated
Kia ora e hoa. Thankyou for simplifying clarifying repeating and enabling me to believe i can do this xx
Love your No Frills teaching gs. I can finally grasp the tenses. Slowly but surely ✅👌
Rawe e hoa so good!
Thank you so much for this. You made this so easy to understand
Love the way you are incorporating some sign language,Kai pai
Thank you for teaching me Reo ❤
👏
That was awesome. Kua mutu au! :)
Awesome bro
Thank you
how do you know when to use au instead of ahau? whats the difference there?
Mōrena e hoa, e rua e rua, exactly the same - can use either one at any time.
@@EmbracingTeReoMaori oh!!!! thanks so much :) tēnā koe :))
HELLO
Does te reo Maori distinguish between 'i run' ( present simple) and 'I am running' ( present continuous)?
Ahiahi mārie e hoa he pātai pai. Do not take my answer as gospel, and maybe you could also ask those on the Facebook page 'Maori 4 Grown-ups', however I was taught that there is "Kei te oma au" and the present continuous would have an "e oma ana" in it. For example: where is Steve? Kei hea a Steve? Steve is sitting down, singing. Kei noho a Steve, e waiata ana. I can't give you an exact answer to your example but I was just taught that the e ___ ana structure can also be dumped in the middle of a sentence to show an action that is 'present continuous.' I welcome others to help answer your pātai. Kia pai tō rā 😀
E hoa ka rawe
Kia Ora
Kei te watch au! 😂
Haha ka pai e hoa, I understood and that's all that matters!
ka pai
kia ora bo. why au and not ahau? kia ora bo.
Kia Ora e hoa. E rua, e rua... they mean exactly rhe same. Completely up to you which one you want to use :)
i’m pretty sure it’s because when speaking if you say “ahau” fast enough it sort of becomes “au” which is why it’s now an accepted alternate use, it’s like how “going to” and “gonna” mean the same thing in english - one is just a reduced version of the other