Ojibwe words meaning "baby" are:abinoojiinsabinoojiinzhensbiibiibiibiinsboojiinzhboojiinzhensjiijii`oonsoshki-abinoojinhoshkabinoojiinyens
The Ojibwa/Ojibwe/Chippewa word for pumpkin is agosimaanPumpkin pie is agosimaanibitisoojiganibakwezhigan - almost, but not quite, the longest word in the language (the longest means "blueberry pie").Alternative words for pumpkin are ogsimaan and ogwisimaan; these are simply dialectic variants of agosimaan.
Ojibwe has many dialects but one word for "pie" is biitoosijigan. Other versions are aagwiitoosijigan, biitoosijigani-bakwezhigan and biitoojiishkweginigan.A fruit pie is baashkiminasigani-biitoosijigan and a blueberry pie is miini-baashkiminasigani-biitoosijigani-bakwezhigan.
http://www.dict.cc/?s=pie=======================Depending on context it could be translated as:TortePasteteKuchen
Not sure if you want it translate to Spanish or translate from Spanish to English so... Spanish to English Pie = foot so therefore pies = feet A pie = on foot (i.e. walking) English to Spanish Pie (pastry) = pastel (depends what part of the world), Pies (plural) = 'pasteles' Pie(s) (meat pie(s)) = empanada(s)
Basically no you can't. Native languages deal with nouns, very few adverbs and almost no concepts (that does not take a long story to translate). To put that in a more simple way; If your name was rock, flower, tree, horse, sun, star, bird - etc, then it would translate if not then you could only translate the root meaning of the name IF it was origin noun.
Note: Chippewa is the same thing as Ojibwa,another name for them is Anishinabe which is what most of them call them self. the ojibwa live north of sault saint marie. the land had alot of trees and thousands of lakes. the lands didn't have mountains, but it had lots of hills and was very rocky. later they moved to the plains. PIE!!!!!!!!!!!!! CAKE!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pizza!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! MUFFINS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! CUPCAKES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! COOKIES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! DONUTS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! BROWNIES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! CHOCOLATE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
oh-g-bwa
things that have to do with Ojibwa and start with A
The ojibwa translation for "you're welcome" is "nahow."
One translation of the word 'ojibwa'' means ''puckered up'' and probably refers to the puckered seams on Ojibwa moccasins.
Ojibwa hunts with bow,arrows,axes and more..........