In Yup'ik, you can say "Quyanaq" to mean goodbye.
You're best bet is to find one on the internet and befriend them and politely ask them if they would mind translating a couple phrases.
Arctic natives speak a variety of languages, depending on their specific culture and region. Some examples include Inuktitut, Inupiatun, Siberian Yupik, and Kalaallisut.
The official language of Alaska is English. However, there are also indigenous languages spoken by Alaska Native peoples such as Iñupiaq, Siberian Yupik, Central Alaskan Yup'ik, and others.
I would say that Yupik was the native language , and Russian the official language.
Brave = valiente
At a guess, an arm and a leg, and that's if your brave enough to try to get one.
There are no Yupik tribes, it's villages that have their own system.
to say dawn in siberian is speekabe ur an idoit i took like seven classes at college about that stuff>>
In Hawaiian, brave can be translated as "kūpa'a."
Eskimo is not a language. The people known as Yupik, Inupiat, and Aleut speak many languages.
Aleut- Txin yaktakuq Siberian Yupik- Piniqamken Yup'ik- Kenkamken Inupiaq- Piqpavagich West Inuktitun- Nagligivagit East Inuktitut- Nalligivagit Kalaallisut- Asavakkit