+1 Tena I poua Ko te puru - ko te puru koa Aha whakatanatana ki runga Whakatanatana ki raro E kore te ora e tae mai I ki konei I t e ture O te mate pukawautia koa Aha te - aha ta - aha tau Aha te riri e ko nga ngirangira Ko nga hotahota O te whitau tapahia a e ho! Ka awheaawhea te rua tamariki a e ho! Nau ano I whai mai ki aku nui a e ho! I kite ai koe - a e ho! I taku taurape - a e ho! I te ra rua o te tara o te whitau tapahia A e ho - hi!
Don´t forget the minginui garlic gang and the 13 onions. Churr from the churr. 13 onions hard core. Tuhoe onions da best. Garlic gang 4eva. Churr from the churr. Table and churr.
A windscreen wiper (Commonwealth English) or windshield wiper (American English) is a device used to remove rain, snow, ice, washer fluid, water, or debris from a vehicle's front window. Almost all motor vehicles, including cars, trucks, buses, train locomotives, and watercraft with a cabin-and some aircraft-are equipped with one or more such wipers, which are usually a legal requirement. A wiper generally consists of a metal arm; one end pivots, and the other end has a long rubber blade attached to it. The arm is powered by a motor, often an electric motor, although pneumatic power is also used for some vehicles. The blade is swung back and forth over the glass, pushing water, other precipitation, or any other impediments to visibility from its surface. The speed is usually adjustable on vehicles made after 1969, with several continuous rates and often one or more intermittent settings. Most personal automobiles use two synchronized radial-type arms, while many commercial vehicles use one or more pantograph arms.
+1
Tena I poua
Ko te puru - ko te puru koa
Aha whakatanatana ki runga
Whakatanatana ki raro
E kore te ora e tae mai I ki konei I t e ture
O te mate pukawautia koa
Aha te - aha ta - aha tau
Aha te riri e ko nga ngirangira
Ko nga hotahota
O te whitau tapahia a e ho!
Ka awheaawhea te rua tamariki a e ho!
Nau ano I whai mai ki aku nui a e ho!
I kite ai koe - a e ho!
I taku taurape - a e ho!
I te ra rua o te tara o te whitau tapahia
A e ho - hi!
Can you translate it to english?
Dont trust the google transition feature whanau, looks a bit suspect.. 👀👀
Vicious
Checkout te pakeha translation you'll scratch your head and think WTF❓😆😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣
@@lemonfish8791 How do we find the pakeha translation?
So much love for the brothers from Ngai Tuhoe who taught me this Haka.
Mean Māori!! The one in the Miami singlet goes hard!!
Hard! Wairua strong in that one
He’s got short arms
@@nelsonpanapa6597 😂
Who? T rex
Powerful!
Manuia lau Malaga 🙏🏼
You say powerful these things are CLOWNS
@@raybreeze2841 "things" is crazy
oosh leader sounds like a war chieftain
Is this is in New Zealand?
Yes nz
Obviously
Nah it's china
💯💯💯 how we roll
@@teivaiafuifala6923 I thought it was Japan🤦🏽♂️
This is staunch ASF 🤯 packed with the MANA
Solid haka Tuhoe! The Children of the mist mean Māori💯💥💥
Don´t forget the minginui garlic gang and the 13 onions. Churr from the churr. 13 onions hard core. Tuhoe onions da best. Garlic gang 4eva. Churr from the churr. Table and churr.
Brother waha leading the te puru haka❤
😱😱😱 POWERFUL!!!!!
All the bros understood the assignment 💪🏽
I felt that RUUUA !!! 😝
Wetiweti! 🙌🏾💯
afxfsgsuflhgy
@@georginahenare9783 ???🤷🏾♀️
Not a day goes by where I don't think of you. ❤ Forever in my heart. 😪😔 Till we meet at them golden gates my love I love you...
R.i.p Dexta
Fuuuu mean ow brutha Kakz Ratima harty dogg🤙🏾
Baddest
we have the power of the bull. tuhoe forever
Awesone haka.
Tautoko 💕💯
Yea fam hearty asf🙌💯
LOVE YOUS . LOVE US 💯
Locals always do it best
Sorry i didn't make it brother Dexta Blood Until we meet again Dog
Fly high my brother and my mama 🤍❤
I just come across this again too brav. Oh how time flies ❤
@@mamateokiwa1357 ❣️❣️❣️
OHHHHHH YEA YEA
ko RORETANA TE KAIKINO TAURANGA ROLLESTON
✊✊✊
Solid
Mau mau Kai
Mau mau taonga
Mau mau tangata I te po😝😛
Young fulla in the yellow shirt is mean! You all are! Churrr!
Dats a mean boogy maori.. hii aue
Do the Ruatoki Hoki Poki.
Where are all the maori in NZ?
Mainly towns in north island,then theres Maori scattered across random cities,and then large communities in south auckland
@@ironlion7177 bro what
@@ironlion7177 I understand you have to try to make money, we are not living in an easy time.
@@teivaiafuifala6923 hey did you say you live in North?
@@ironlion7177 how are you doing?
Atahua ke haka te puru
Words
TUFFFF
Fck yeah MEAN MAORI MEAN !!!!!!
this is a mean as haka I have seen. one voice.
A windscreen wiper (Commonwealth English) or windshield wiper (American English) is a device used to remove rain, snow, ice, washer fluid, water, or debris from a vehicle's front window. Almost all motor vehicles, including cars, trucks, buses, train locomotives, and watercraft with a cabin-and some aircraft-are equipped with one or more such wipers, which are usually a legal requirement.
A wiper generally consists of a metal arm; one end pivots, and the other end has a long rubber blade attached to it. The arm is powered by a motor, often an electric motor, although pneumatic power is also used for some vehicles. The blade is swung back and forth over the glass, pushing water, other precipitation, or any other impediments to visibility from its surface. The speed is usually adjustable on vehicles made after 1969, with several continuous rates and often one or more intermittent settings. Most personal automobiles use two synchronized radial-type arms, while many commercial vehicles use one or more pantograph arms.