Navajo has a dual plural and and three or more plural and a fourth person too and it conjugates in the verb so you need to give more information to say translate this. To go to sleep is: 'iishháásh but Navajo verbs are very complicated, more like Turkish than English.
Note: Navajo tend not to use commands, it is impolite to interfere with autonomy (even with children), you might say: Da' bił nínízin? (Are you sleepy?). Or Yá'át'ééh hiiłchi'į' (good night). Or maybe: ajółhosh laanaa nisin -- (I wish one(3rd person) could go to sleep.)
t'áá áníiltso
or
t'áá niil 'áá ńt 'éé'
or
t'áá ániit 'éé' ńt 'éé'
All of them mean more or less "all of us" or "every last one of us".
The t' is a glottalized consonant it is different than a t. The marks over vowels are high tone marks. The mark ' is a consonant called a glottal stop as in English uh'oh.
good night
good night
To say sleep in Burmese you might say "Eigh douh meh" or go to sleep or sleep.
It can be both. For instance, you might say, "I want to go to sleep. I'm going to go sleep in my bed." Confusing? I think so, too.
nemasu - to sleep
Zasnut'
Geyn keyn shlof- going to sleep.
Say hey lets have a sleep over, then you go ask your mom if you can have a slumber party, if she says yes invite all your friends.
you say it like this- Pergi ke tidur
how many challenges did the navajo twins go through
Yes, all animals and mammals sleep.
Adormecer or Vai Dormir
I would first say that you express out who or what is they, and then ask it.
To say "I want to go to sleep" in Ilocano, you can say, "Adda'y koma unay amin."