-the numeral ONE is pronounced "t'áá - ł (exasperated 'thl' sound) á'í "
t'ááłá'í ----as an adjective.
another way is: Łáa'ii ---in counting
t'ááłáhádi--one time
łáh -- one upon a time
Yah'ah' teh' ah'bin'eh - Hello, good morning in Navajo
To join the Navajo tribe, you will need a Certificate of Blood (COB). To obtain a COB, you will need to know to which chapter of the Navajo reservation your great-grandparent belonged (chapters are districts in the Navajo reservation where your ancestor was born or may have lived). After obtaining this information, you will need to apply through the agency in Window Rock, Arizona. You will need to provide your birth certificate and your parents' birth certificates. The agency will approve your application and send you your COB. However, you must be at least one-quarter Navajo qualify. If one of your great-grandparents was Navajo, that would make your grandparent (their child) half Navajo, your parent one quarter Navajo, and you only one-eighth Navajo.
Woman in Navajo: asdzání (tends to mean younger) or asdzą́ą́ ( mature lady, after about 50) or asdzáánwomenfolk is : sáaniiYoung woman can also be : ch'ikę́ę́h
It is: Nídin sélį́į́'
sh sh7 ch44h 7 ch44h
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.
aseezį́ binaaltsoos - is one way to say newspaper in Navajo. There are about three other ways too. The main Newspaper on the Navajo Nation is the Navajo Times. You can find them online and on Facebook. There is also the Navajo-Hopi Observer.
One way to say Pumpkin in Navajo is naayízí. The Pumpkin you see on Halloween are usually called naayízí łich'íí'ígíí.
Pam is not a Navajo given name. You would say it as the English "Pam".
Haa'goh
so̜'
Yah'ah' teh' ah'bin'eh - Hello, good morning in Navajo
How do you say forest daughter in Navarro
Emergency is: nisihwiinídéél
probably, "ízliil"
hao`o