mkhgju
No we made the code. so we can defeat our enemies so they were called. like Japanese etc.
Yes, there were. Most noteworthy were the "Navajo Codetalkers," whos Native American language could not be understood by the Japanese. Richard V. Horrell WW 2 Connections.com
Were called the Navajo Code Talkers.
The main characters in "Code Talkers" are the Navajo Marines who served as codetalkers during World War II, particularly the protagonist, Ned Begay, and his friend and fellow codetalker, Sam. The story follows their experiences as they use their native language to transmit secret military codes and navigate the challenges of war.
Some Navajo were drafted but the Code Talkers were volunteers.
The military utilized Navajo men who fashioned a secret code from their ancient Navejo language to relay messages of vital importance to the war effort. Navajo language was not decipherable to enemy
The Navajo were recruited to serve in the military to help create a Navajo code and used it to confuse the Japanese. They were called the Navajo Code Talkers and a few are still alive. They finally received medals from the President. Only the Navajo could use and fully understand the code. Some of the upper military leaders learned some of it as it was created and they taught the Navajos how to send and receive code.
Most of the Navajo Code Talkers served in the best military branch, The United States Marines. A few served in the Army but not many.
The Navajo.
In my opinion it would be the Navajo code talkers. Their language was kept within the small amount of Navajo's so it was very unknown to the majority of the people including the enemies of the U.S. military. They had large success in the war and fought with a lot of courage and bravery.
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.
Even if I knew, I doubt there is a written word for it. Navajo had an unbeatable advantage as a code in WW2 because it was a spoken language only, and an illegal language until the US found a use for it. Suggest you try Navajo and "translation." Who knows? A written language was created for Cherokee, so maybe there are ones for other American native languages, or at least phonetic equivalents. Also, some words do not exist in some languages. For example, French has no word for "shallow." This made a problem when using Navajo as a military radio code, as some military terms did not exist in the Navajo language.