Just a few words for wind in some of the languages of North America are:
Lakota...............tate
Hidatsa..............hutsi
Cheyenne...........háa'háeše
Blackfoot...........sopo
Mahican.............kshaxen (blown by wind)
Delaware...........kschachan (the wind blows)
Powhatan..........kikithamots
Shawnee...........mis-sich-kon-ne
Maliseet.............wocawson
Mohegan............wutun
Mohawk..............kawera'shatste
Navajo...............niyol, nilchi
Apache..............nilchi
Jicarilla..............nlchi
Arikara (Sanish)..huutuúnu'
Shahaptin (Yakama)..huli
Hopi..................hukba
Shoshone...........neai
Yaqui.................jeeka
translated from nacotah or Sioux the name wind dancer would be tate-waci (tah tay- wah chee) there it is wind dancer
Where is the answer.
the horse wind is a native American horse told in many tales if you want know more you would have to ask a native American in mescalero new Mexico :]
Chief Howling Wind, known for the controversy surrounding who actually discovered America, was Native American. While there are no pictures to show what Chief Howling Wind actually looked like, he is often portrayed as a tall Native American with long dark hair and traditional Native American clothes.
Native American name Means wind over the mountains
Kansas, named after the Native American tribe Kansa, which means "The People of the South Wind"
You can find examples of authentic Native American Art at Discovery Path. You can also find unique and beautiful examples of Native American Art at Thunder Heart Drawing and Wind Spirit Teachings.
Arkansas
Hurricane comes from the Taino language word for wind.
Native Wind Instruments
Kemah is a Native American word meaning "facing the wind."Its my name as well =)
Local Texas tradition says that it comes from a Karankawa word meaning "facing the wind".This is impossible to verify since the Karankawa people became extinct before 1860 and their language was not studied or recorded in detail. The only source for about 100 words of the language is a Mrs Alice Williams, who had lived among the Karankawa and learned some words; she recorded that the word for wind was ba'.
Kansas was named after the native American tribe Kansas, people of the Southeast Wind. http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/tribes/siouan/kansahist.htm They were native to the territory originally but were moved to Oklahoma.
The name Kenmah appears to be derived from the name Kemah. The meaning of this is wind in the face and is Native American in origin.