Māori has mostly a
verb-subject-object (VSO)
word order. It is also
analytical, featuring almost no
inflection, and makes extensive use of grammatical particles to indicate grammatical categories of tense, mood, aspect, case, topicalisation, among others. The personal pronouns have a distinction in
clusivity, singular, dual and plural numbers, and the genitive pronouns have different classes (
a class,
o class and neutral) according to whether the possession is
alienable or the possessor has control of the relationship (
a category), or the possession is
inalienable or the possessor has no control over the relationship (
o category), and a third
neutral class that only occurs for singular pronouns and must be followed by a noun. There is also
subject-object-verb (SOV) word order used in agent emphatic sentences. Examples of this include
Nāku te ngohi i tunu ("I cooked the fish"; literally
I the fish cooked) and
Mā wai te haka e kaea? ("Who will lead the haka?"). Agent emphatic sentences can also take the
subject-verb-object (SVO) word order. In this order the example sentences would be rendered as
Nāku i tunu te ngohi and
Mā wai e kaea te haka? Māori
noun and
adjective phrases form by
modifying those bases after, as is the norm of Austronesian languages e.g. "big house" where adjective
nui modifies subject noun
whare after cf. .
Bases Biggs (1998) developed an analysis that the basic unit of Māori speech is the phrase rather than the word. The lexical word forms the "base" of the phrase. Biggs identifies five types of bases.
Noun bases include those bases that can take a definite article, but cannot occur as the nucleus of a verbal phrase; for example: (fish) or (tree). Plurality is marked by various means, including the definite article (singular , plural ), deictic particles (that tree), (those trees), possessives (my house), (my houses). A few nouns lengthen a vowel in the plural, such as (woman); (women). In general, bases used as qualifiers follow the base they qualify, e.g. "matua wahine" (mother, female elder) from "matua" (parent, elder) "wahine" (woman).
Universal bases are verbs which can be used passively. When used passively, these verbs take a passive form. Biggs gives three examples of universals in their passive form: (drunk), (wept for), and (said).
Stative bases serve as bases usable as verbs but not available for passive use, such as
ora, alive or
tika, correct. Grammars generally refer to them as "stative verbs". When used in sentences, statives require different syntax than other verb-like bases.
Locative bases can follow the locative particle
ki (to, towards) directly, such as
runga, above,
waho, outside, and placenames (
ki Tamaki, to Auckland).
Personal bases take the personal article
a after
ki, such as names of people (
ki a Hohepa, to Joseph), personified houses, personal pronouns,
wai? who? and
mea, so-and-so.
Particles Like all other Polynesian languages, Māori has a rich array of particles, which include verbal particles, pronouns, locative particles, articles and possessives. Verbal particles indicate aspectual, tense-related or modal properties of the verb which they relate to. They include: •
i (past) •
e (non-past) •
i te (past continuous) •
kei te (present continuous) •
kua (perfect) •
e ... ana (imperfect, continuous) •
ka (inceptive, future) •
kia (desiderative) •
me (prescriptive) •
kei (warning, "lest") •
ina or
ana (punctative-conditional, "if and when") •
kāti (cessative) •
ai (habitual) Locative particles (prepositions) refer to position in time and/or space, and include: •
ki (to, towards) •
kei (at) •
i (past position) •
hei (future position) Possessives fall into one of two classes of prepositions marked by
a and
o, depending on the dominant versus subordinate relationship between possessor and possessed:
ngā tamariki a te matua, the children of the parent but
te matua o ngā tamariki, the parent of the children.
Determiners Articles The definite articles are (singular) and (plural). Several other determiners termed definitives are related to the singular definite article , such as the definitive
possessive constructions with and and the
demonstrative determiners. The Māori definite articles are frequently used where the equivalent,
the, is not used in English, such as when referring generically to an entire class. In these cases, the singular can even be used with a morphologically plural noun, as in {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi as opposed to {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi In other syntactic environments, the definite article may be used to introduce a noun-phrase which is pragmatically indefinite due to the restrictions on the use of as discussed below. The indefinite article is used most frequently in the predicate and occasionally in the subject of the sentence, although it is not allowed in subject position in all sentence types. In the predicate, the indefinite article can introduce either nouns or adjectives. The article either can be translated to the English 'a' or 'some', but the number will not be indicated by . With nouns that show morphological number, may be used either with singular or plural forms. The indefinite article when used with mass nouns like water and sand will always mean 'some'. The indefinite article is highly restricted in its use and is incompatible with a preceding preposition. For this reason, it cannot be used in the grammatical object of the sentence as these are marked prepositionally, either with or . In many cases, speakers simply use the definite articles and in positions where is disallowed, however the indefinite articles and may be used in these situations to emphasise the indefiniteness. {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi In positions where both and / may occur, there are sometimes differences of meaning between them as the following examples indicate. {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi The proper article is used before personal and locative nouns acting as the subject of the sentence or before personal nouns and pronouns within prepositional phrases headed by prepositions ending in
i (namely , , and ). {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi The personal nouns are not accompanied by definite or indefinite articles unless they are an intrinsic part of the name, as in
Te Rauparaha. {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi Proper nouns are not preceded by the proper article when they are neither acting as the subject of the sentence nor in a prepositional phrase headed by , , or . For example, after the focusing particle , the proper article is not used. {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi |abbreviations=DIST:distal
Demonstrative determiners and adverbs Demonstratives occur after the noun and have a deictic function, and include , this (near me), , that (near you), , that (far from us both), and , the aforementioned (anaphoric). These demonstratives, having a connection to the definite article are termed definitives. Other definitives include (which?), and , (a certain). The plural is formed just by dropping the
t: (this), (these). The related adverbs are (here), (there, near you), (over there, near him). Phrases introduced by demonstratives can also be expressed using the definite article or preceding a noun followed by one of the deictic particles , or . The
t of the singular definite article appears in the singular demonstratives but is replaced by
∅ in the plural, having no connection with in the majority of dialects. {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi |abbreviations=PROX:proximal {{interlinear|indent=2| lang = mi |abbreviations=PROX:proximal However, in dialects of the
Waikato area, plural forms of demonstratives beginning with
ng- are found, such as 'these' instead of the more widespread (as well as and
possessives such as 'my (plural, inalienable)' instead of ). The following table shows the most common forms of demonstratives across dialects.
Pronouns Personal pronouns Pronouns have singular, dual and plural number. Different first-person forms in both the dual and the plural are used for groups inclusive or exclusive of the person(s) addressed. Like other Polynesian languages, Māori has three
numbers for pronouns and possessives: singular,
dual and plural. For example: (he/she), (those two), (they, three or more). Māori pronouns and possessives further distinguish exclusive "we" from inclusive "we", second and third. It has the plural pronouns: (we, exc), (we, inc), (you), (they). The language features the dual pronouns: (me and another), (me and you), (you two), (those two). The difference between
exclusive and inclusive lies in the treatment of the person addressed. refers to the speaker and others but not the person or persons spoken to ("I and some others but not you"), and refers to the speaker, the person or persons spoken to and everyone else ("you, I and others"): • : hello (to one person) • : hello (to two people) • : hello (to more than two people)
Possessive pronouns The possessive pronouns vary according to person, number,
clusivity, and possessive class (a class or o class). Example: (my pen), (my pens). For dual and plural subject pronouns, the possessive form is analytical, by just putting the possessive particle (
tā/tō for singular objects or
ā/ō for plural objects) before the personal pronouns, e.g. (our class), (their [dual] house); (our classes). The neuter one must be followed by a noun and only occur for singular first, second and third persons. is my, is my (plural, for many possessed items). The plural is made by deleting the initial [t].
Interrogative pronouns • ('who') • ('what') • /
whea ('where') • ('whence') • ('when') • ('how many [things]') • ('how many [people]') • ('how') • ('which'), ēhea ('which [pl.]') • ('why [reason]') • ('why [cause]')
Phrase grammar A phrase spoken in Māori can be broken up into two parts: the "nucleus" or "head" and "periphery" (modifiers, determiners). The nucleus can be thought of as the meaning and is the centre of the phrase, whereas the periphery is where the grammatical meaning is conveyed and occurs before and/or after the nucleus. The nucleus can be translated as "house", the periphery is similar to an article "the" and the periphery indicates proximity to the speaker. The whole phrase, , can then be translated as "this house".
Phrasal particles A definite and declarative sentence (may be a copulative sentence) begins with the declarative particle
ko. If the sentence is topicalised (agent topic, only in non-present sentences) the sentence begins with the particle
nā (past tense) or the particle
mā (future, imperfective) followed by the agent/subject. In these cases the word order changes to subject-verb-object or subject-object-verb. These are the agent emphatic sentences discussed earlier. The agent topicalising particles can contract with singular personal pronouns and vary according to the possessive classes:
nāku can be thought of as meaning "as for me" and behave like an emphatic or dative pronoun.
Case particles • Nominative: ko • Accusative: i • Dative/directional locative: ki • Genitive: a/o
Negation Forming negative phrases in Māori is quite grammatically complex. There are several different negators which are used under various specific circumstances. The main negators are as follows: and are two negators which may be seen in specific dialects or older texts, but are not widely used. The most common negator is , which may occur in one of four forms, with the form only being used in response to a question. Negative phrases, besides using , also affect the form of verbal particles, as illustrated below. The general usage of can be seen in the following examples. The subject is usually raised in negative phrases, although this is not obligatory. Each example of a negative phrase is presented with its analogue positive phrase for comparison.
Passive sentences The passive voice of verbs is made by a suffix to the verb. For example, -ia (or just -a if the verb ends in [i]). The other passive suffixes, some of which are very rare, are: -hanga/-hia/-hina/-ina/-kia/-kina/-mia/-na/-nga/-ngia/-ria/-rina/-tia/-whia/-whina/. The use of the passive suffix -ia is given in this sentence:
Kua hangaia te marae e ngā tohunga (The marae has been built by the experts). The active form of this sentence is rendered as:
Kua hanga ngā tohunga i te marae (The experts have built the marae). It can be seen that the active sentence contains the object marker 'i', that is not present in the passive sentence, while the passive sentence has the agent marker 'e', which is not present in the active sentence.
Polar questions Polar questions (yes/no questions) can be made by changing the intonation of the sentence. The answers may be
āe (yes) or
kāo (no).
Derivational morphology Although Māori is mostly analytical there are several derivational affixes: • -anga, -hanga, -ranga, -tanga (-ness, -ity) (the suffix depends on whether the verb takes, respectively, the -ia, -hia, -ria or -tia passive suffixes) (e.g.
pōti 'vote',
pōtitanga 'election') • -nga (nominaliser) • kai- (agentive noun) (e.g.
mahi 'work',
kaimahi 'worker/employee') • ma- (adjectives) • tua- (ordinal numerals) (e.g.
tahi 'one',
tuatahi 'first/primary') • whaka- (causative prefix) == Influence on New Zealand English ==