What is Whakaahua?
Ko te whakaahua ko te whakamahi i te reo e pa ana ki ngā wheako o te tinana—tirohanga, oro, pa, kakara, me te kai—hei waihanga i ngā wā me ngā kare ā-roto.
Ko te whakaahua te kōwhiri kupu e pa ana ki ngā wheako o te tinana, me te whakamahi i ngā kupu whakarāpopoto kia ora ai ngā wā e whakaatu ana. I roto i ngā kōrero romance, ka āwhina te whakaahua ki te mōhio ki ngā wā, ki te taiao, me te kemia, kaua ki te kōrero noa engari ki te whakarite i te reo o te tangata e waihanga ana i te reo me te kite o te tangata ki ngā mea o te wāhanga. He kākahu kaha te whakaahua ki ngā mea motuhake (he kapu porcelena e pūtia ana, te ua e tāwhai ana ki te matapihi), ā, he hono ki te tiro o te tangata ki ōna ake kare ā-roto me te wā.
Usage example
Ka kakara te ua me te huka; he māramara whakamahana te tēpu kawhe, e wai ana te pāmahana i runga i tōna kapu, ā, ka ngaro te haruru o te tāone ki te ngākau. I kitea e ōna ringa te rim o tōna kapu nā te mea kāore ia e taea te titiro ki te āhua o te rā e mate ana i tana maka iti, he halo iti, mōrearea.
Practical application
Ko te mea nui o te whakaahua, ko te waihanga i te urunga ki roto i te mōhio me te wairua o te kāraki e pā ki te tangata. Whakamahia te whakaahua ki te: whakarite i te tirohanga o te tangata ki tētahi wā, tohu i ngā paanga o te kare-ā-roto ki te kore whakamārama, wehe i ngā tangata ma te hono ki ngā wheako rongo (tētahi ki te kakara, tētahi ki te papatahi o te kiri), me te whakapakaro i te here o te aroha ki ngā taipitopito o te tinana. Ngā tohutohu: tohe ki te whakamahi i ngā mea e rua ki ia wā, whakamāorihia ngā taipitopito motuhake ki te mārō ake, rereketia te reo whakarāpopoto ki te tono, ā, kia ū ki te reo o te kaituhi me te tere o te pūkāo.
FAQ
How much imagery is too much?
Balance is key. Strong imagery enhances a scene; overloading every sentence with metaphors or sensory detail can slow pacing and distract. Aim for vivid anchors at important emotional beats and simpler language during action or transitions.
How can imagery reveal character?
Characters notice different things—one might fixate on smells and textures, another on light and color. Repeating certain sensory details (a character who always notes the hum of a room, or the texture of fabric) becomes part of their voice and reveals priorities, anxieties, or desires without telling.
Is imagery the same as description?
Not exactly. Description can list facts about a place or object; imagery uses sensory, often figurative language to evoke feeling and atmosphere. Good description becomes imagery when it connects detail to emotion or perspective.
Related blog posts
Ngā Aroha Raumati o te Ao: Ngā Tohu Aroha mai i te taha o Spain ki ngā Hui o Tokyo
Kei te makutu tētahi mea mō ngā aroha o te Raumati. Tērā pea ko te hau wera e kawe ana i te kata ki runga i te teresa i t...
Whakahou Anō i te Aroha Tuatahi: Te Tuhituhi i te Aroha Anō me ngā Mahi Maumahara a AI
I tēnei tuhinga, ka arotake tātou i te whakamahi i ngā āhuatanga maumahara o AI ki te whakaū i ngā flashbacks kaha, ki te...