In Blackfoot, as in most Algonquian languages, you must say "my father", "his father", "your father" - there is no separate word meaning just " father".
My father is ni'nah
Sk^na^
Beothuk
THe Blackfoot word for eye is mooipssp, with the possessive plural form owapispists (his eyes).Sky is nam'ipokaiThe preposition meaning within is istsips'tsSo: nam'ipokai istsips'ts owapispists = sky within his eyes
There is no such language as "Native American". Native Americans speak more than 700 different languages.
That's impossible to say. There's at least hundreds of unique and distinct Native American languages and dialects. First you would need to find out what nation and tribe your guest is from (Sioux, Crow, Blackfoot, Mohawk, etc.) and get a translation from people familiar with that particular language.
Ni'nah minikskiw.
angel
moh kins'stis
moh kins'stis
Sk^na^
Names can not be translated into any native American language.
Akai - Ref: Living With Wolves - Jim & Jamie Dutcher
I am assuming you mean the Blackfoot peoples of Alberta, Montana and Saskatchewan, not the Blackfoot Sioux who are an unrelated and distinct tribe with a different language. Even some Native Americans do not realise that there is a difference. The Blackfoot word for the number two is natoka, pronounced nahtohka.
The Blackfoot
Beothuk
THe Blackfoot word for eye is mooipssp, with the possessive plural form owapispists (his eyes).Sky is nam'ipokaiThe preposition meaning within is istsips'tsSo: nam'ipokai istsips'ts owapispists = sky within his eyes
The Blackfoot's last hereditary leader wasMountain Chief (Ninastoko), 1848-1942