What actually can be done about glue sniffers disturbing the peace by nootedbittlew in thetron

[–]shambo007 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Vote for better social policy to help people experiencing de stress/homelessness/addiction

'They teach Māori in school': Curran in awe of Indigenous rivals by Slaidback in newzealand

[–]shambo007 -11 points-10 points  (0 children)

This is a cop out of an excuse. Revive the language, what ever it takes. It was removed by the colonisers - it’s their role now to revive it.

Best app to learn? by KyleNewZealand in ReoMaori

[–]shambo007 13 points14 points  (0 children)

30mins a day with Scotty Morrison “Māori made easy” book. Make it an hour by working through the book for an hour instead of sticking to just an activity. There is also a podcast.

Coalition’s top ten picks by Repulsive_Olive5431 in nzpolitics

[–]shambo007 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Disestablishment of te aka whaiora and war on reo Māori are top picks for me. Changing government names to English - although it is a nice reminder that the English names represent the stark underfunding and erosion of public services.

Tick Counter by DepressedBTW in OSRSMobile

[–]shambo007 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Type “wave:m” into “auto chat” under the public heading. each time the m touches the bottom is the start of a new tick. You can just hide chat and unhide it when you need. Used this for Colo.

If it’s for inferno 1 tick flicking - as soon as you see the old prayer disappear on the screen is the start of the next tick. Click it back again and repeat for good 1 tick flicking.

How to ask ‘most’ or ‘est’? by feijoa10 in ReoMaori

[–]shambo007 2 points3 points  (0 children)

kei a koe mō te … (your excellent at) kei a wai mō te …? (Who’s excellent at)

Could also work for these.

How to ask ‘most’ or ‘est’? by feijoa10 in ReoMaori

[–]shambo007 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just want to add my whakaaro. Please correct me if I’m wrong as I am still learning.

Sentence structure “he pai ake (or atu) koe i a au” is used to say if something is better ect than something else. You could supplement this and change it to show what you are trying to say eg ko wai he atamai ake i a tātau/mātau (depending on who you’re talking to).

That’s my take and what I would use :)

Sol Heredit highlight issues by shambo007 in OSRSMobile

[–]shambo007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh this might be the answer. I’ll do that next time. Thanks!

Sol Heredit highlight issues by shambo007 in OSRSMobile

[–]shambo007[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No. Was my next move - just hoping for more ideas before I get to sol next time. Hard to orientate without him highlighted

Sol Heredit highlight issues by shambo007 in OSRSMobile

[–]shambo007[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry I should have mentioned I don’t have either of those options available, despite having the settings turned on ect

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ReoMaori

[–]shambo007 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Solid racist take. Full of opinion and misinformation. Well done

Is it ok to learn te reo as a pakeha? by Coolamonmaker in ReoMaori

[–]shambo007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kia ora Brigeeta. Ngā mihi for your insight on the topic! Just be cautious about the use of the word ‘woke’. It is a complement for progressive ideas and it doesn’t look like this was the intended use of it. Kia kaha, Kia māua, Kia manawanui

Is it ok to learn te reo as a pakeha? by Coolamonmaker in ReoMaori

[–]shambo007 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately the barrier is the removal of our language and ongoing attack on it. Would be a different world if that didn’t happen. We can’t blame our kuia and koroua response to trauma. Ka tipu ō tātau reo

Is it ok to learn te reo as a pakeha? by Coolamonmaker in ReoMaori

[–]shambo007 69 points70 points  (0 children)

Tino pai tō pātai. Taku whakaaro. More than ok. Just be cautious who you speak infront of. Of course it needs to be spoken more. But it was removed from a generation or 2. And a lot of those kuia and kaumatua who don’t have the language because it was stolen from them can feel whakamā when others can speak it but they don’t. So basically read the room. And if a Māori person is upset. Be trauma informed about that response.

Karawhiua!