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There were more than a few, most of the principle chiefs survived the move. Needless to say that would encompass naming a few hundred people. To name one, Chief John Ross (Cherokee).
Well, the question isn't clearly enough stated to answer. the migration of the Cherokees is synonimous with the end of the Trail of Tears process, if that's what you mean.This is not what I mean. I have a history paper due on Wednesday, and the thing I have to write about is "Why do historians not have an accurate account of what went happened during the trail of tears?"I'm just a seventh grader, but I'm doing a research projects on the Trail of Tears, and an answer to your question could be, Historians have an accurate account of what happened during the Trail of Tears because many Cherokees and Settlers did live through it, and the story was passed on. Also, I'm sure many Americans kept a record or wrote down things about it.Hey, I just wanna say that he/she was asking why historians don't have a good record of what happened on the trail of tears. Well if i had to answer it I would say that many of the documents were damaged or lost on the long journey and that many of the Cherokee on the trail didn't have a useful way to record what happened to them. That's what I would say.
There are multiple different Native American languages. The Cherokee language is the only Native language to have its own syllabary, created by Chief Sequoyah. The Cherokee syllabary was invented by George Guess/Gist, a.k.a. Chief Sequoyah, of the Cherokee, and was developed between 1809 and 1824. If you wanted to say "Hello." in Cherokee, you would say "Osiyo", pronounced "Oh-see-yo".
There are several hundred poems about the Trail of Tears, some written by the ones who experienced the event, and many written afterwards. If you include "Non-published" works the number would grow to thousands (Non-published in noted poem journals). I'm sorry to say you would need to be more specific in your question.
i think it's the same. because me and my are so alike, and Cherokee is nothing like the English language so it must be the same. i know it. hope this help ya. :-) gvlieliga! (gvlieliga means your welcome, just in case you were wondering)
some ppl say that the early settlers caused a lot of the trouble with the trail of tears and other things
There were more than a few, most of the principle chiefs survived the move. Needless to say that would encompass naming a few hundred people. To name one, Chief John Ross (Cherokee).
Well, the question isn't clearly enough stated to answer. the migration of the Cherokees is synonimous with the end of the Trail of Tears process, if that's what you mean.This is not what I mean. I have a history paper due on Wednesday, and the thing I have to write about is "Why do historians not have an accurate account of what went happened during the trail of tears?"I'm just a seventh grader, but I'm doing a research projects on the Trail of Tears, and an answer to your question could be, Historians have an accurate account of what happened during the Trail of Tears because many Cherokees and Settlers did live through it, and the story was passed on. Also, I'm sure many Americans kept a record or wrote down things about it.Hey, I just wanna say that he/she was asking why historians don't have a good record of what happened on the trail of tears. Well if i had to answer it I would say that many of the documents were damaged or lost on the long journey and that many of the Cherokee on the trail didn't have a useful way to record what happened to them. That's what I would say.
Well thousands of Native Americans died on that route, so you would think that their family members would cry over their dead. So yes, I would say that there was real tears on the trail.
Malena is the Cherokee form of Malinda
Na'too'
The Cherokee nation like so many other Native American nations has its own language. In Cherokee you say adawehi to say angel.
In Cherokee, you would say "Asgaya digalvwisdanehi."
I have no idea what Steven mean in Cheroke. And do anyone know how to say Steven in Cherokee?
No, Cherokee people do not speak Spanish as their native language. Cherokee is a separate language from Spanish, and the Cherokee Nation primarily speaks the Cherokee language. Some individuals within the Cherokee Nation may also speak Spanish, but it is not a widespread language within the community.
It is not a Tsalagi (Cherokee) word so it is said the same way it is spoken in English.
There are multiple different Native American languages. The Cherokee language is the only Native language to have its own syllabary, created by Chief Sequoyah. The Cherokee syllabary was invented by George Guess/Gist, a.k.a. Chief Sequoyah, of the Cherokee, and was developed between 1809 and 1824. If you wanted to say "Hello." in Cherokee, you would say "Osiyo", pronounced "Oh-see-yo".