In Ojibwa, "god" can be translated as "Gitchi-Manidoo."
The ojibwa translation for "you're welcome" is "nahow."
In Farsi, you can say "Inshallah" to mean God willing or if God wills.
To say "oh my god" in French, you would say "oh mon dieu."
In Yoruba language, you can say "แปlแปrun mi" to mean "My God."
To say "To God be the Glory" in Nahuatl, you could say "Inin Tloque Nahuaque tlahtoltzin."
oh-g-bwa
The ojibwa translation for "you're welcome" is "nahow."
The ojibwa translation for "you're welcome" is "nahow."
The Ojibwa people call God , "The Creator" .
Migwetch
Happy Birthday Grandma I Miss You In Ojibwa
mskwakwoneing
I guess you mean "I love you".In the Chippewa, Ojibwa or Anishinaabe language you say gizahgin or gi-zaagi`in, from the verb zaagi`, meaning to love somebody.
makadewaa animikii
There is no such language (or tribe) as "Iroquois". Each of the Iroquois tribes spoke its own language - these were related to each other, but entirely different. Furthermore there is no direct translation of the Christian concept of "May God bless you".
The Ojibwe/Ojibwa/Chippewa word for midnight is aabitaa-dibik. At midnight is aabitaa-dibikag, after midnight is ishkwaa-aabitaa-dibikak.
You have to be more specific but in ojibwa it is "waaban"