asgayia osti
The answer previously given is close, but not exactly accurate. The Cherokee word for man is *A-sga-ya.* When that word is spoken it is often contracted to sound like *a-sky.* The Cherokee word for little is u-sdi. When the two words are brought together the word for man is contracted even further so that the Cherokee name *Little man* is spoken as *Sky-u-sdi.*
Usv yona i believe. I'm cherokee and trying to learn the language. I know Usv is the word for little and yona or yonv means bear. Not sure if they would be put together to form the phrase or not but ..yea hopefully it's right.
Diné yázhí
The first word means man. The second little or small.
The marks over some of the vowels are high tone marks not accents. Think as though you are singing. low high, high high.
All the vowels are short in this: ne not neigh. a as in father, i as in bit.
Issues asagayo
To say Bear in Cherokee....it is Kanyanol......To say it, it is said( can-yawn-all).... Hope that helped!
"Nita" (pronounced "needa") means bear in Choctaw. I am not sure how to say "little" though. To say "little" in Choctaw is "ushi," and "bear" is "nita." So you would combine it to make "nitushi," which means " little bear."
Iroquois
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".
This is easy. Άρκτος (árktos)=bear
To say Bear in Cherokee....it is Kanyanol......To say it, it is said( can-yawn-all).... Hope that helped!
"Nita" (pronounced "needa") means bear in Choctaw. I am not sure how to say "little" though. To say "little" in Choctaw is "ushi," and "bear" is "nita." So you would combine it to make "nitushi," which means " little bear."
PoShu
You may say 'chiisai kuma,' or 'chiisana kuma.' "Bear cub" would be 'kuma no ko.'
Ursa Minor.
Petit ours
In Hawaiian, "little bear" is translated as "Κ»Δ«lio hΕkΕ« Κ»uΚ»uku."
kenra:ken ohkwa:ri'
小熊(koguma)
You can bear a load.
I would say Smokey the Bear, that's who.
You would say bear to the right when giving directions.