Canary Islands | James Cook | Faroe Islands | Solomon Islands | Channel Islands | Falkland Islands | Marshall Islands | South Shetland Islands | Māori people | Hawaiian Islands | Pacific Islands | New Zealand Māori rugby league team | Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands | Aleutian Islands | Cook Islands | Balearic Islands | Cook County, Illinois | New Zealand Māori | James Cook University | British Virgin Islands | Cayman Islands | Māori language | Channel Islands of California | Andaman Islands | Ryukyu Islands | Cook County | Galápagos Islands | Chatham Islands | Caroline Islands | U.S. Virgin Islands |
Common names include Giant Taro and Elephant Ear Taro, while words for the plant in the various Polynesian languages include Kape (Niuean, Tongan), Ape (Cook Islands Māori, Tahitian, Hawaiian), "ta'amu" in Samoan language, and Pulaka (Tuvalu).
Pa‘umotu is closely related to the languages of eastern Polynesian including Hawaiian, Māori, Cook Islands Māori and Rapa Nui, the language of Easter Island.