Chief Joseph
Many of the northern and more western tribes attempted this, the Nez Perce (and Chief Joseph) are probably the most infamous for it however.
The Nez Perce tribe speak what's simply called the Nez Perce language. With only about 200 native speakers, it's considered an endangered language.
The Incas
Samoset
Shree Atal Behari Vajpayee
The Hundreds of different Indian languages were not discovered. They evolved naturally among the people that spoke them.
The so-called "Plateau tribes" did not all speak the same language:the Kootenai spoke a Kitunahan language perhaps distantly related to Algonquianthe Flatheads spoke a Salish language (the most easterly of all Salish tribes)the Pend d'Oreille spoke a Salish languagethe Shuswap people spoke a Salish languagethe Lillooet tribe spoke a Salish languagethe Thompson tribe spoke a Salish languagethe original Nicola people spoke an Athapaskan languagethe Okanagan tribe spoke a Salish languagethe Lakes tribe spoke a Salish languagethe Colville tribe spoke a Salish languagethe Kalispel spoke a Salish languagethe Wenatchee spoke a Salish languagethe Chelan spoke a Salish languagethe Sanpoil people spoke a Salish languagethe Nez Perce people spoke a Shahaptin languagethe Coeur d'Alene tribe spoke a Salish languagethe Cayuse people spoke a Penutian languagethe Umatilla people spoke a Shahaptin languagethe Walla Walla tribe spoke a Shahaptin languagethe Palouse people spoke a Shahaptin languagethe Warm Springs /Tenino spoke a Shahaptin languagethe Yakima people spoke a Shahaptin languagethe Wasco people spoke a Chinookan languagethe Wishram people spoke a Chinookan languagethe Molala people spoke a Penutian languagethe Klamath people spoke a Penutian languagethe Modoc people spoke a Penutian languageAlthough many of these languages are related they are not always mutually understandable; Yakima Shahaptin is not the same as Nez Perce Shahaptin for example.
They were held in a room until they spoke of what they did wrong!
She spoke English, Shoshone and other Indian languages
Barack Obama, John Mccain,etc
English.
AnswerMost Nez Perce people speak English today. Some of them, especially older people, also speak their native Nez Perce language. Nez Perce is a very difficult language for English speakers, because of its long words and consonant sounds that don't exist in English. But if you'd like to know an easy Nez Perce word, "hóó" (pronounced similar to "hoh") is a friendly greeting.Nez Perce they also have hand sign too