The Mi'kmaq greeting, as in many of the Algonguian languages, is kwe'.
The Mi'kmaq word for hello is kwe'
they now call it mikmakik, but the word mikmaq is influenced by the french, so it could have been L'nukik since the mikmaq called themselves lnu
Nukumi
the mikmaq aka (L'nu) taught history throught stories and legends. Example: The mikmaq land was destroyed, the forests burnt the river dryed, no animals left but a few, so Bear came and taught the mikmaq to respect the land and use everybit of its catch, and not to waste. This might have been the telling of the asteroid that hit north America 13,000 years ago.
they eat worms and little things
they sit on tolliet and they pooping and later that eat it :)
lived in wigwams traveled by foot or canoe
The mikmaq were once enemies with the Mohawks and waged war with them. They were also enemies with the British.
They got to Canada by a large peice of ice from Europe to P.E.I (Prince Edward Island).
There are many ways to say hello or greet someone in Mi'kmaq. One way is to say it is Pjila'si English sound = [ eep chi Laa si ] The answer above is in fact 'welcome', Hi in mikmaq is Kwe' (G-wai).
The Mi'kmaqs' first contacts with Europeans were in the early 1500s with Portuguese, Spanish, French, and English fishermen who fished in the Atlantic Ocean and along the St. Lawrence River. Most of the European explorers and trappers who traveled further inland into Mi'kmaq territory were French.
Oral history helped pass down stories and legends