The alphabet in Navajo is aa, bee, chee, ch\'ee, dee, dlee, dzee, ee, gee, ghee, hee, hwee, ii, jee, kee, k\'ee, kwee, lee, Łee, mee, nee, oo, see, shee, tee, t\'ee, Tł\'ah, Tł\'ee, tsee, ts\'ee, wee, xee, yee, zee,and zhee.
Because it didn't have a written alphabet, so there was no way to study it, just memorize it.
The proper adjective form for Navajo is Navajo, as in Navajo Nation, Navajo people, Navajo history, Navajo art, etc. An example sentence: We visited the Navajo display at the museum to see the Navajo jewelry.
Navajo clothing was fashioned and made by the Navajo females
a navajo
The Navajo word for a caterpillar is ch'osh ditł'ooi.
Because it didn't have a written alphabet, so there was no way to study it, just memorize it.
The code talkers of WWII were from the Navajo tribe. Navajo has no alphabet or symbols, and is spoken only on the Navajo lands of the American Southwest. One estimate indicates that less than 30 non-Navajos, none of them Japanese, could understand the language at the outbreak of World War II. The idea to use Navajo for secure communications came from Philip Johnston, the son of a missionary to the Navajos.
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.
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.
The proper adjective form for Navajo is Navajo, as in Navajo Nation, Navajo people, Navajo history, Navajo art, etc. An example sentence: We visited the Navajo display at the museum to see the Navajo jewelry.
It's still Navajo, or "Navajo Nation"
Yes, it is capitalized and it is not Navajo Indians. It is Navajo people.
Navajo
The codes that were made using Navajo language to encode English word was useful because it enabled the US military to direct attacks against the Japanese in real time over open radios. It worked largely because Navajo had not been internationally described. The code itself was a fairly simple alphabet substitution code. Navajo is very very different than Japanese or English and many of the sounds are almost impossible for a Japanese speaker. The Navajo could speak it rapidly and decode it without using a code book or machine. It is thought that it was essential to many of the successes in the war in the Pacific.
Gary Witherspoon has written: 'Navajo kinship and marriage' -- subject(s): Navajo Indians, Marriage customs and rites, Kinship 'Language and art in the Navajo universe' -- subject(s): Navajo art, Navajo language, Navajo philosophy 'Navajo Kinship and Marriage'
The Navajo is a Native Indian tribe
NAVAJO,