Baayoo inee - a directive or command to not forget
ííshją́ -- don't forget!
t'ááká baa yóónééh -- Don't forget!
tsédídééh is Navajo for purple. It comes from a name of a flower.Attached is video to learn to say the colors in Navajo. Remember to say the tones!Navajo is a tonal language, you can't just add a English question sound or valley girl thing without changing meaning.
Neezgai is "to be painful" or to give paindiniih -- painshijéí diniih-- my heart painNeezgaigo baa 'íít'i' - to have a piercing pain
The Navajo word for a caterpillar is ch'osh ditł'ooi.
Hunter is: naalzheehíThe mark over the final vowel makes it high tone. Tone changes meaning in Navajo. naal-zhey -hi (i is as in "bit") low, low, hi tone
Human language. The Navajo people, being one race in a species of many intelligent, modern Homosapiens, communicated as we still do today with sophisticated language. Navajo people exist right now, especially in North America. Most all of them speak English, but many thousands of them also speak the old Navajo tongue. I have to believe that the Navajo are, and were, very much like the rest of us in the ways that matter most. In love, justice, religion, art, science, culture, and ambition they dominated their world in their own time. They could not have accomplished it without language.
To say "never forget" in Thai, you can say "ไม่ลืม" (mai leum). This phrase is used to express the idea of not forgetting something or someone.
welcome
Bi'ootseed
usted nunca se olvidará de mí
Navajo people is: Diné (the mark means that vowel is high tone. It is not an accent mark)Language language is: Diné bizaadNavajo land is : Diné bikéyah or Dinétah
In Dine Bizaad (Navajo): Azhe'e.
I'm no expert, but the Navajo language was created prior to the introduction of Christianity to America, so there probably isn't a word for Christmas in their language.
tsédídééh is Navajo for purple. It comes from a name of a flower.Attached is video to learn to say the colors in Navajo. Remember to say the tones!Navajo is a tonal language, you can't just add a English question sound or valley girl thing without changing meaning.
Neezgai is "to be painful" or to give paindiniih -- painshijéí diniih-- my heart painNeezgaigo baa 'íít'i' - to have a piercing pain
The Navajo use the same terms to mean both the Sioux and the Comanche:naałani or anaałaninaa means enemies, łani means "many"
in which apache language? I know it in Navajo and it's called hashké or naabaahíí "the one who goes to war"
The name of this New Mexico town in Navajo language (Dine' bizaad) is:Bááh DíílidorNiinah NízaadorDoo 'Alk'aii