New Zealander
Else clues• Once Were Warriors folk
• Once Were Warriors people
• The Piano extra
• Whale Rider extra
• Whale Rider people
• A language of New Zealand
• A Polynesian language
• A Polynesian tongue
• Aboriginal New Zealander
• About 10% of New Zealanders
• Aotearoa native
• Aotearoa people
• Auckland aborigine
• Aucklander, maybe
• Aucklander, perhaps
• Austronesian language
• Certain New Zealander
• Cook Island native
• Cook Islands folk
• Culture depicted in Whale Rider
• Early New Zealander
• Haka dancers of New Zealand
• In New Zealand, it means 'normal'
• Indigenous Kiwi
• Indigenous New Zealander
• Indigenous people of New Zealand
• Kapa haka dancer
• Kiri Te Kanawa, e.g.
• Kiri te Kanawa, for one
• Kiwi
• Kiwi from New Zealand
• Kiwi hunter
• Kiwi Polynesian
• Kiwi tongue?
• Language akin to Tahitian
• Language from which kiwi comes
• Language from which mako comes
• Language in Polynesia
• Language known to native speakers as te reo
• Language of New Zealand
• Language related to Hawaiian
• Language related to Tahitian
• Language spoken in The Piano
• Language that gave us kiwi
• Language that gave us mako
• Language that gave us the word kiwi
• Language that gave us the words mako and moa
• Language whos name means native
• Language whose name means normal
• Like many people in Whale Rider
• Like the word kiwi
• Many Cook Islanders
• Much-tattooed people
• N.Z. aborigine
• N.Z. native
• Native encountered by Captain Cook
• Native from New Zealand
• Native kiwi
• Native New Zealander
• Natives encountered by explorer James Cook
• Natives of the land known as Aotearoa
• New Zealand aborigine
• New Zealand ethnic
• New Zealand language
• New Zealand minority
• New Zealand native
• New Zealand Polynesian
• New Zealand tongue
• New Zealand tribesman
• New Zealander of Polynesian descent
• New Zealander, maybe
• Ngaio Marsh's extraction
• Non-European New Zealander
• Oceania language
• Oceanian original
• One of Polynesian-Melanesian descent
• Pacific people whose most famous musical instrument is a wooden trumpet called the putorino
• People of New Zealand
• Polynesian
• Polynesian language of New Zealand
• Polynesian native
• Polynesian New Zealander
• Polynesian people
• Polynesian, perhaps
• Singer Te Kanawa is one
• Soprano Kiri Te Kanawa, e.g.
• Soprano Te Kanawa is one
• Tasman greeter
• Te Kanawa for one
• They greet each other by pressing their noses together
• Tiki carver of New Zealand
• The Oceanic language spoken by the Maori people in New Zealand