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  1. Languages of New Zealand. New Zealand has three official languages; English, Māori and New Zealand Sign Language. In 1987, the Māori Language Act made the Māori language the second official language of New Zealand. It also formed the Māori Language Commission (Māori: Te Taura Whiri o te Reo Māori, often shortened to Te Taura Whiri [1] ).

  2. テンプレートを表示. ニュージーランド手話 (ニュージーランドしゅわ、 英語: New Zealand Sign Language 、略称: NZSL 、 マオリ語: Te Reo Turi )は ニュージーランド の 聴覚障害者コミュニティ の主な言語である。. 2006年4月にニュージーランド手話法2006の下で ...

  3. 2 de abr. de 2024 · main language of the deaf community in New Zealand. This page was last edited on 2 April 2024, at 10:08. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  4. New Zealand dollar. The New Zealand dollar ( Māori: tāra o Aotearoa; sign: $; code: NZD) is the official currency and legal tender of New Zealand, the Cook Islands, Niue, the Ross Dependency, Tokelau, and a British territory, the Pitcairn Islands. [2] Within New Zealand, it is almost always abbreviated with the dollar sign ($).

  5. The mass media in New Zealand include television stations, radio stations, newspapers, magazines, and websites. Media conglomerates like NZME, Stuff, MediaWorks, Discovery and Sky dominate the media landscape. [1] Most media organisations operate Auckland -based newsrooms with Parliamentary Press Gallery reporters and international media ...

  6. New Zealand Sign Language (NZSL) is the language of New Zealand’s deaf community. In use for over a century, it was made an official language by the New Zealand Sign Language Act 2006. In 2018, about 23,000 people in New Zealand had some knowledge of NZSL. An estimated 3,000 to 4,000 of these are deaf people for whom it is their main language.

  7. La langue des signes néo-zélandaise (en anglais : New Zealand Sign Language, NZSL) est la langue des signes utilisée par les personnes sourdes et leurs proches en Nouvelle-Zélande. Elle est devenue langue officielle du pays en avril 2006, statut qu'elle partage avec l' anglais (langue officielle de facto) et le maori.