"Hello, my friend" - An english transliteration; although Ya' at'eeh was and is still used to mean "good", and was the word selected to take on the english meaning "hello".
ya'at'teeh
The english to navajo translation of Fighter Plane is Da-he-tih-hi. ChaCha!
what is the Navajo translation for lone wolve
No. The Navajo language does not have the English vowel U. English does not have some of the Navajo vowels. Navajo vowels can be high tone or low or rising or falling if long. This change meaning in Navajo but only is used for questions in English. They can have nasalization which the French have but not the English. And they distingush between vowels held long or short which does not change meaning in English. See related links for a list of Navajo letters and sounds.
Not a literal translation but its like this: dooládó' dooda da
ya'at'teeh
Sounds like the common way an English speaker says the Navajo word for "Hello."Yá'át'ééhThe Navajo name for the community is Tʼáá Bííchʼį́įdii.
The english to navajo translation of Fighter Plane is Da-he-tih-hi. ChaCha!
it is Navajo. It means like hello or hiAnswerI asked a Navajo woman what it meant and she told me that it basically is a greeting, but translated into English it means yata (sky) hey (blessing)
Hill is: dah yiskʼidto be windy is: níyoldah yiskʼid níyol
what is the Navajo translation for lone wolve
txo
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
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.
No. The Navajo language does not have the English vowel U. English does not have some of the Navajo vowels. Navajo vowels can be high tone or low or rising or falling if long. This change meaning in Navajo but only is used for questions in English. They can have nasalization which the French have but not the English. And they distingush between vowels held long or short which does not change meaning in English. See related links for a list of Navajo letters and sounds.
The nearest word in genuine Navajo is wóláchíí, meaning a red ant or harvester ant.
Not a literal translation but its like this: dooládó' dooda da