English edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Maori taihoa (wait; do not hurry).

Adjective edit

taihoa (not comparable)

  1. (New Zealand politics) Slow and cautious; gradual.
    • 1970, James A. Clifton, Applied anthropology: readings in the uses of the science of man:
      He found in office that the taihoa policy was not the creation of his predecessor, but was imposed by the fundamental conditions of the problem to which every Native Minister has to address himself.
    • 2004, Richard S. Hill, State authority, indigenous autonomy, page 101:
      The main aim of the Liberal government had always been pakeha land settlement, even through the taihoa period.

Maori edit

Interjection edit

taihoa

  1. wait, don't (do something) yet