Here are a few translations for "little bear" in other languages:
In Ute language, "little bear" is "na-kusi."
In Hawaiian, "little bear" is translated as "ʻīlio hōkū ʻuʻuku."
Kennel in other languages: French: Chenil Spanish: Perrera German: Zwinger Italian: Canile
In Spanish, you say "abundancia." In French, you say "abondance." In German, you say "Fülle."
In French, you say "oeuf." In Spanish, you say "huevo." In Italian, you say "uovo." In German, you say "Ei."
Little (small or young) bear in just a few native American languages: Lakota......................mahtociqala Crow.........................daxpitchee kalishta Hidatsa.....................nohpitsi karista Natick........................mosq wuskoshim Navajo.......................Shash yázhí
A single word like that is unlikely to translate into "little black bear" in English, simply because "little" and "black" would have to be expressed as separate concepts in most native languages.The Ojibwe term makwa means simply "bear"; to say "black bear" is two words - makadewi-makwa. To make this a "little black bear" adds a diminutive ending (-oons): makadewi-makoons.So makoons on its own simply means a bear cub, which might be brown, black or any other colour.
"Nita" (pronounced "needa") means bear in Choctaw. I am not sure how to say "little" though. To say "little" in Choctaw is "ushi," and "bear" is "nita." So you would combine it to make "nitushi," which means " little bear."
Ursa Minor.
In Hawaiian, "little bear" is translated as "ʻīlio hōkū ʻuʻuku."
"Athabaskan" refers to a large group of languages spoken by many different tribes in Canada and the USA. There is therefore no single word for bear cub in "Athabaskan".In the Ahtna (Ahtena) language of Alaska, the word for a bear cub is sos. To say "this is a bear cub" would be sos ggaay nt'ae.
Petit ours
小熊(koguma)
kenra:ken ohkwa:ri'
-maliit na Sam.-
in chinese, it's " he "
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