haka

suomi-englanti sanakirja

haka englanniksi

  1. dog, pawl

  2. enclosure, natural enclosure

  3. hook

  4. catch

  5. timber hitch

  6. becket

  7. carbon monoxide

  1. A group dance of New Zealand|New Zealand's Maori people featuring rhythmic chanting, vigorous facial and arm movements, and foot stamping. Traditionally a dance, today it is also performed to welcome guests, as a mark of respect at occasions such as commemorations and funerals, as a challenge to opposing teams at sports events, and for artistic purposes.

  2. (quote-book), publisher in ordinary to Her Majesty|year=1838|volume=I|page=81|pageurl=https://archive.org/stream/newzealandbeingn00polapage/n104/mode/1up|oclc=1003989957|passage=After each of my retinue were presented to the chief, partaking of the honour of the ougi, or salutation, the hákà, or dance of welcome, was performed; this was commenced by our entertainers, who placed themselves in an extended line, in ranks four deep. This dance, to a stranger witnessing it for the first time, is calculated to excite the most alarming fears; (..)

  3. (quote-journal), 15 London|Waterloo Place|month=January|year=1876|volume=XXXIII|issue=193|page=65|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=pzMFAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA65|oclc=561748243|passage=A "Haka" is the native dance, answering to the ''corroboree'' of the Australian aboriginals, and we were anxious to see it. (..) Later in the evening, however, the complaisant Herekiekie entertained a small and select party at a "Haka" in his "whare" or house (pronounced wharry). It was exactly what I expected. The performers, all male, stood in a row, one, slightly advanced, acting as fugleman. They shouted and gesticulated with the most hideous and revolting gestures, grimaces, and yells.

  4. (quote-book)

  5. (quote-web)

  6. (quote-book) But ''hakas'' are not restricted to war; they are also used as a welcome to strangers, as part of a funeral, or as part of various celebrations and ceremonies.

  7. To perform the haka.

  8. (quote-book); Wanganui, New Zealand: H. Ireson Jones|year=1870|page=274|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=LcERAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA274|oclc=57701969|passage=They hoisted him up to the ridge pole and lighted the fire; they began to haka, when they were tired of that they sang songs, (..)

  9. (quote-book) &91;page 214&93; She hakaed for some time, and all the people were quite in love with her.

  10. boat

  11. (l) (gloss)

  12. (quote-journal)

  13. hook, clasp (gloss)

  14. paddock, corral, croft (gloss)

  15. very good, skilled, masterful

  16. to go

  17. (syn)

  18. shelf, rack

  19. perch, roost

  20. platform

  21. hole, breach

  22. vacancy

  23. empty, vacant

  24. full of holes

  25. chin

  26. to pick (q)

  27. to mark (+obj)

  28. (inflection of)

  29. (ja-romanization of)

  30. (cln) four

  31. to paint, to smear(R:ki:Armstrong)Barlow, A. Ruffell (1960). ''Studies in Kikuyu Grammar and Idiom'', pp. 64, 229.

  32. to propitiate by gift

  33. to bribe

  34. A dance; a haka.

  35. (infl of) (q)

  36. (l) dance

  37. (alt form)

  38. (infl of)

  39. (nn-former)

  40. (senseid) (alt form)

  41. chin

  42. (n-g)

  43. chin (lower part of face)

  44. , (m), or (m) to hook (attach with something hook-like)

  45. to get hooked (stuck on something hook-like, not figuratively)

  46. idea; opinion

  47. notion; understanding

  48. belief

  49. guess

  50. suspicion