English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Maori kōneke.

Noun

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koneke (plural konekes or koneke)

  1. A farm vehicle used in New Zealand that has wheels in the back like a cart and runners in front like a sledge.
    • 1931, New Zealand Railways Magazine - Volume 6:
      There are the tracks of sledge runners on the narrowing road; that lonely farmhouse around the next bend, a dairy farm twelve hundred feet or more above the harbour level, sends its milk-cans down to the bay by the old-style bush koneke that is the only means of conveyance on some of these lofty roads.
    • 1965, New Zealand Parliament, Parliamentary Debates: House of Representatives, page 2835:
      I have been shocked to see young children put on a koneke loaded with hay, with the tractor in crawler gear moving down a hill and the farmer pitching off bales of hay.
    • 1967, James Sanders, The time of my life: an autobiography, page 47:
      He used to blow his stack properly when he had his three-horse team hitched up to a koneke load of fertiliser.

Usage notes

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While koneke is the original form of this word, modern speakers more commonly use konaki.

Anagrams

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  NODES
see 1