Pacific language course launches during Tonga Language Week

A new course explores the complex and vital role of Pacific languages in shaping identity, culture and worldview.

Image of Dr Melenaite Taumoefolau
Dr Melenaite Lolohea Taumoefolau has been in high demand during Tonga Language Week.

Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland has proudly launched an exciting new course by distinguished Tongan linguist Dr Melenaite Lolohea Taumoefolau - timed perfectly to coincide with Tonga Language Week.

The Pacific Studies senior lecturer last year gave the opening address at the New Zealand Association of Language Teachers Biennial Conference, and the World Congress of the International Federation of Language Teacher Associations - Rethinking Pacific Language Teaching.

She has been a strong advocate for the revitalisation of Pacific languages in Aotearoa and internationally.

“Language is more than vocabulary - it is a system of concepts that reflects the lifeways and worldviews of its speakers. It is the essential tool through which we learn to understand, think and talk about the world around us," Taumoefolau says.

The new course, Pacific Language Studies: Issues and Resolutions, will explore the complex and vital role of Pacific languages in shaping identity, culture and worldview.

Topics will include language endangerment and maintenance, orthographies (the standardized systems for writing a language, including its spelling, alphabet and punctuation rules), translation and teaching, and learning practices - all examined through a Pacific lens.

Language is more than vocabulary - it is a system of concepts that reflects the lifeways and worldviews of its speakers. It is the essential tool through which we learn to understand, think and talk about the world around us.

Dr Melenaite Lolohea Taumoefolau Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland

Image of Dr Melenaite Taumoefolau
Dr Taumoefolau presenting a seminar about the newly launched course: Pacific Language Studies: Issues and Resolutions. Photo supplied

To mark the launch, Dr Taumoefolau delivered an insightful seminar at the University on 21 August, providing a deep dive into lea faka-Tonga, the Tongan language and its unique conceptual and cultural frameworks.

“Language is a device for talking about things, and different languages don't necessarily say the same things, they don't necessarily talk about the same things.

“As this is Tonga Language Week, I want to illustrate how Tongan language reflects a somewhat different worldview, by letting you inside the language so you can take a brief glance at the conceptual world that speakers of Tongan language live in.”

She gave an overview of the stratified levels of Tongan language, illustrating how language reflects the hierarchical nature of Tongan society.

Dr Taumoefolau explained how commoners address royalty, including the Tongan King, using distinct vocabulary and respectful forms of speech.

These linguistic layers are not just grammatical - they are cultural codes that signal status, respect and relational context.

Dr Taumoefolau also challenged conventional views of language as merely a system of grammar. Instead, she described language as a conceptual and cognitive tool - a means of thinking, knowing and constructing reality.

"Without language, we cannot think. Language is the instrument through which we create our worldviews," she said.

Her seminar was a celebration of Tongan linguistic heritage and a call to action for Pacific communities and scholars to engage deeply with their languages - not only to preserve them, but to understand the worlds they encode.

Hailing from Nukuʻalofa, Tongatapu, Dr Taumoefolau was previously Principal of Tonga College and a senior education officer in the Tongan Ministry of Education.

She was the first Pasifika woman to graduate with a PhD from Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland.

Media contact

Kim Meredith | Pacific media adviser

0274 357 591

kim.meredith@auckland.ac.nz