mąʼiitsoh is wolf ( literally big coyote)
atʼééd is a girl
mąʼiitsoh 'atʼééd----wolf girl
WIKIPEDIA AND TRANSLATE are there for a reason
ookamijosei
The Code Talkers were Navajo. The Germans had no linguists trained to translate Navajo so, the Code Talkers could pass sensitive information by speaking 'in the clear'.
cuevo ponchar (coo-WAY-Vo Pon-char)
We call ourselves Dine' which translate to "The People" - most other tribes refer to themselves as this also
Found an English to Navajo translation site. Although it doesn't have 'he is dead' I was able to translate 'he left' /'he die'/dead on there. he left = dah-de-yah he die = bi dasétsą dead = anoonéét
Cherokee (Tsalagi): u-s-ti u-do gv-do-di a-da-nv-do
ASL does translation, but it's going to cost you. Still trying to find a free site. Let you know if I find one. glosbe.com does some words but not the grammar which is the hardest. Try also the man who does the Navajo Word of the Day website proably would know.
Traditional Navajo names are completely different. You can't really translate English names to them at all. The Latin meaning of Deanna is divine or holy so it could be Diyin At'ééd, holy girl. That is not a really Navajo name though. Some traditional Navajo girl names are :Ádeezbaa'((she is going to lead a raid), Átsé Deezba (She is going first on a raid), Dlį́baa (Warrior Girl), Naazbaaa'(she went on a raid), or Asdzą́ą́łtsoii (yellow woman), and Ashiike Naakii ( the one with twin boys)
In English is is called Navajo, In Navajo is it called Diné bizaad. There are over 300,000 Navajo, about 175,000- 200,000 speak Navajo.
It does not often work to translate names into another language. You would just say Taylor now days.The profession, tailor, is: 'éé' ííł'íní or ná'áshkadii, but that is not a Navajo personal name.Mount Taylor is the sacred blue mountain of the south for the Navajo and is called Tsoodził. The meaning is unclear, maybe tongue or prayer mountain. It is also called Níłtsą́ Dziil (Rain mountain) or Dootł'izhii Dziil (Turquoise mountain)
There are two ways you can say "Navajo" in Navajo. Dinémeans "The People" in Navajo. The Navajo call themselves "Diné". Nabeehó is another way of saying Navajo.