Her husband: bahastiin or bich'ooní or biką'. (take away the bi and add shi for "my'. Add ni for "your").
Hastiin alone can mean older man or husband
or: bił hinishnáanii (the one I live with)
There are two possible answers according to the dictionary.
family hooghan hazʼÄ�Ì� (in a way means home member) or biÅ� kééhashtʼÃinii (biÅ� being a preposition meaning (basically) "with"--so it may mean 'member of family')
my family shikʼéà (also relative) , hakʼéí means one's family, nikʼéí --your family, bikʼéí --his/her/it's family and so on
Doo k'é nizin da -- "he/she acts like he has no family" Literally- "He or she does not think according to kinship" This is one of the worst things you can say about someone.
spouse is:
shich'ooní (my spouse)
nich'ooní (yours)
ach'ooní (someones)
bich'ooní (his/hers/it's)
nihich'ooní ( theirs)
and so on...
The mark over the vowel means high tone (important to use)
The mark after ch means it is a glottalized consonant. Hold your breath in your throat as you say the ch sound.
she'aszdáán (woman)
or: shich'ooní (partner)
or: she'áád (female)
These are one of a category of words in Navajo that only occurs in the possessive form.
shich'ooní nizhóní ( my beautiful spouse)
nich'ooní nizhóní ( your beautiful spouse)
ach'ooní nizhóní ( someone's beautiful spouse)
ch'ooní nizhóní ( his/her/it's beautiful spouse)
And so on....
You could also say: asdzą́ą́ nizhóní ( beautiful woman)
The word for "spouse" in Navajo is one of a category of words ( relations, body parts, etc) that can only exist in the possessive.
The ch' is a glotalized consonant. You sort of hold your breath as to say the sound. Just ch is a different consonant. The marks over vowels make those high tone. The a with a squiggle under it makes it nazalized like the o in the French word bon. The zh is like in the middle of pleasure. The dz is like in adze.
In Navajo an older sister is shadi. A younger sister is shideezhi.
asdzą́ą́
wife
There are two ways you can say "Navajo" in Navajo. Dinémeans "The People" in Navajo. The Navajo call themselves "Diné". Nabeehó is another way of saying Navajo.
The Navajo word for a caterpillar is ch'osh ditł'ooi.
Pam is not a Navajo given name. You would say it as the English "Pam".
In Navajo, "ruler" can be translated as "naatʼáanii binaaltsoos."
The Navajo word for dawn is hayííłką; early dawn is yidiiską.
Haa'goh
so̜'
burrito
Yah'ah' teh' ah'bin'eh - Hello, good morning in Navajo
How do you say forest daughter in Navarro
Emergency is: nisihwiinídéél
probably, "ízliil"