The Navajo language is properly called Diné bizaad. The Navajo people are called either Diné or Naabeehó.
Dine bizaad (Navajo language) for crayon is: bee 'ak'e'elchíhí The mark above some vowels makes those high tone (not stressed) The mark alone means the consonant a glottal stop like the midddle of uh'oh.
Historically is has also been spelled "Navaho". That is how English speakers heard it. Navajo is the Spanish derived spelling. They got it from a Tewa word meaning "fields in the river bottoms".Navajo speakers spell the Navajo Nation :" Naabeehó Bináhásdzo". In Navajo it is: Diné bikéyah or Dinétah. Dinéis the Navajo word for Navajo people.
Human language. The Navajo people, being one race in a species of many intelligent, modern Homosapiens, communicated as we still do today with sophisticated language. Navajo people exist right now, especially in North America. Most all of them speak English, but many thousands of them also speak the old Navajo tongue. I have to believe that the Navajo are, and were, very much like the rest of us in the ways that matter most. In love, justice, religion, art, science, culture, and ambition they dominated their world in their own time. They could not have accomplished it without language.
hablakasj;a
You can't spell Kenneth in Navajo. Navajo has very different sorts of traditioonal names that aren't like English names. In English the name comes from two different Gaelic names. One means "handsome" and one means "fire". So perhaps you could translate into hasttin nizhoni or diné nizhoni. These mean Mr handsome and handsome man, but they are not traditional. Fire is kǫ' but that is not an name. Diné bikǫ' might mean man of fire, again not a normal name. Kǫ' deiniłtsésí is fireman but that is a job not a name.
Dine bizaad (Navajo language) for crayon is: bee 'ak'e'elchíhí The mark above some vowels makes those high tone (not stressed) The mark alone means the consonant a glottal stop like the midddle of uh'oh.
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.
Historically is has also been spelled "Navaho". That is how English speakers heard it. Navajo is the Spanish derived spelling. They got it from a Tewa word meaning "fields in the river bottoms".Navajo speakers spell the Navajo Nation :" Naabeehó Bináhásdzo". In Navajo it is: Diné bikéyah or Dinétah. Dinéis the Navajo word for Navajo people.
Human language. The Navajo people, being one race in a species of many intelligent, modern Homosapiens, communicated as we still do today with sophisticated language. Navajo people exist right now, especially in North America. Most all of them speak English, but many thousands of them also speak the old Navajo tongue. I have to believe that the Navajo are, and were, very much like the rest of us in the ways that matter most. In love, justice, religion, art, science, culture, and ambition they dominated their world in their own time. They could not have accomplished it without language.
diyin yá naalʼaʼí-- meaning a supernatural messenger. It is not a Navajo concept. The word was made up after contact with Christians.
ííshją́ or t'áákáábaa yóónééh -- "don't forget!"
Shash is the word for bear in Diné bizaad (Navajo language).Shashtsoh is grizzly bear.Shash łizhinii is black bear.The "spelling" system was developed in the 1940s.The L with a line through it is a sound that is like one in Welsh. You put your tongue in the L position and blow out around the sides.
if you mean the language, it is spelled " Afrikaans" if you mean the people they are calle " Afrikaners"
The correct spelling is English (people or things from England, or the language that originated there).
Great , some people spell Grate.
In the Navajo language, Diyin is the word for "holy". Navajos will say, "Diyin God" to refer to the christian God. Also used for the Christian god is : Diyin Ayóí Átʼéii. which refers to a monotheistic god.In the Navajo religion the name for a deity is: Haashch'ééh.There are many who have this word at the start of their name such as: Haashch'ééłti'í--Talking God, Haashch'ééshzhiní -- Black God (creator of the universe) and Haashch'éé'ooghaan.Also used is for other beings: DiyinDineʼé -- Holy People.Also Changing Woman: Asdzą́ą́ NádleehéAnd First Man and First Woman: AłtséHastiin and Ałtsé Asdzą́ą́
Hinduism is a religion, not a language. You can only spell respect using language (not religion).