E noho ra (written as three separate words) means goodbye to someone you are leaving. I.e, you are leaving your nana's house, and she is staying at her house, but you are going somewhere else, then you would say 'e noho ra.' If you were staying and you were saying goodbye to someone who is leaving then you would say, "Haere ra." Other ways of saying goodbye are hei konei ra, or ka kite ano (see you again).
I think you mean hei hei? someone use heija when they chat but it's correct to write hei. hei hei means hi hi.
E noho ra, Hei konei ra, or Ka kite ano - I'm unsure of whether the spelling in those words is correct or not, but that's definitely the right terminology.To say goodbye in Maori:"Haere ra" - say to someone who is leaving."E noho ra" - say to someone who is staying."Ka kite ano i a koe" ( I'll see you again) - say to one person."Ka kite ano i a korua" (I;ll see you again) - say to two people."ka kite ano i a koutou" (I'll see you again) - say to three or more people.(this is often shortened colloquially to "ka kite ano" or even "ka Kite).
"Hallo" or "Hei".
none of your busines
what do you mean by Ra and Rz values
"Hei aha" in Māori translates to "never mind" or "don't worry about it" in English.
Yakov Borisovich Estrin has written: 'Zashchita dvukh Konei'
ra ra ushkamba i wannt your romance.
Ra in English is a name, it has not native meaning. Ra in ancinet Egyptian was most likely "ruler".
"Hei Bang" in Chinese means criminal gang.
hei (ה) is the 5th letter of the Hebrew alphabet. It has the sound of "H" but it can also be silent. It means "here" (Genesis ch.47), though in modern Hebrew it isn't used to mean that.