A twenty and a dried fish will do it. BUT do not over do it: two twenties and a dried fish and you are married!
qujannamiik or nakurmiik
ᐃᓛᓕ (Ilaali)
kaka maka
Gunalchéesh
Nakurmiik,
thank you
The Inuit are not Indians, but they are very much alive. Thank you for asking.
"Qujannamiik" is an Inuktitut word, which is one of the primary Inuit languages spoken in the Arctic regions of Canada. It is used to express gratitude or say thank you.
The rules were: share the animal you killed. thank the animals spirit for giving up its life. say "booka" before you kill and animal.
In Inuktitut, the language of the Inuit, you can say "qujannamiik" to mean "welcome".
searik
Natsiq
In Inuktitut the word Hello would be Ainngai spelled ᐊᐃ (Ai) ᐊᐃᓐᖓᐃWelcome would be Tunngahugit or Tunngasugitdepending on who you were greeting.Kutaa (Inuit, Canada)
An Inuit would say amarok mikiyok("the-wolf-it-is-small").
I thingk how to say hi in inuit is nagoshea
for please they say please, and for thank you they say thank you...
To say "Thank you" it is: "Misotra". To say "Thank you very much" it is: "Misotra betsaka"