Lakota has many different terms for "friend" depending if it is a man or woman speaking about a male or female friend, in informal or formal situations.
A common term used by men to describe their male friends is khola (a very throaty k followed by olah). This is the singular form; to make it plural you have to use the plural form of an accompanying verb (as in "my friend they-went-hunting").
In the Dakota dialect the same word is said khoda.
Sadee'
The Shoshone and Comanche kinship terms are extremely complex, as in many other native American languages. There is also a close connection between male or female relatives on the same level that does not appear in English.For "mother", "mother's sister" and "wife of a father's brother" the same word is used in Shoshone: pia.
how do you say thank you in Shoshone
The Shoshone legends are myths that are true.
The Shoshone natives lived in teepes
the shoshone tribe was in Montana. The animals are buffalo and beavers
Shoshone comes from Sosoni, a Shoshone Amerindian word for high-growing grasses.
Since Idaho is an English word Shoeshone would say Idaho
The Shoshone word for night is dugaani. The word for an owl is mumbichi. The Shoshone would not use these words together, since all the owls they had knowledge of were nocturnal so the term "night owl" would be needlessly stating the obvious; they would simply say mumbichi: owl.
The Shoshone and Comanche kinship terms are extremely complex, as in many other native American languages. There is also a close connection between male or female relatives on the same level that does not appear in English.For "mother", "mother's sister" and "wife of a father's brother" the same word is used in Shoshone: pia.
The address of the Shoshone Public is: 211 S Rail St W, Shoshone, 83352 5393
The phone number of the Shoshone Public is: 208-886-2843.
how do you say thank you in Shoshone
The Shoshone legends are myths that are true.
Common Shoshone greetings are behne and pehnaho, which do not quite mean "hello".There is no word for "goodbye" in most native American languages and Shoshone is no exception.
The Shoshone natives lived in teepes
Shoshone National Forest is in Wyoming.
The Shoshone call themselves: Newe, meaning "People"Different bands had names based on their geographic homelands and for their primary foodsources. Such as: Agai-deka -salomon eaters, Doyahinee --mountian people, Kammitikka--- Jack rabbit eatersThe word Shoshone is thought to come from the Shoshone language word for "high growing grass"---- soshoni'Neighboring tribes called them "Grass House People," based on their traditional homes.