The English translation of the Sioux word "hau" is "hello" or "hi."
The Lakota translation for "Hau toniktu ka huwo" is "hello, how are you."
In Sioux, you would say "Hau, nitake oyasin?" to greet someone and ask how they are.
The Maori translation for "Hauraki" is "Te Hau o te Raki".
Unfortunately, soul mates is not listed on the Omniglot website of useful phrases in Lakota Sioux. However, hello (hau), how are you (T—khe_khe yaœ? he?) and good morning (H’?ha?ni la??i) is listed.
The word "hoeing" comes from Middle English "hau" or "hewe," which ultimately traces back to the Old English word "hawian," meaning "to cut with a hoe." It has its roots in Proto-Germanic and Proto-Indo-European languages.
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hau means snow or hau kea which means white snow
Hau Kola is Sioux and it is pronounced like: HOW KO-laah and it basically means "greetings friend" or "hello friend". Although it is important to remember that english is an entirely different language with similar sounds but they are not exactly the same sounds as are pronounced in Sioux. So "Hau" sounds very similar to "How" but they are not exactly the same. When I pronounce "Hau", to me it feels more like a single syllable combination of "haa" + "oo" more than it feels like the english word "how". ~ Zoon
The Lakota translation for "Hau toniktu ka huwo" is "hello, how are you."
In Sioux, you would say "Hau, nitake oyasin?" to greet someone and ask how they are.
ice = hau
Aloha: Say nani hau (nah-nee how)
"The native American Indian language" implies that there is only one, when in fact there are more than 2,000 native languages in the Americas, most of which do not include that word.In Lakota (the language of the Teton Sioux), the word haucan signify a greeting or hello used only by men (hau kola, hello my friend); it can mean a formal "yes" (hau, mnin kte, yes I will go there); or it can mean "no" in response to a negative question: Hi shni he? - Did he not come? Hau, hi shni. - No, he did not come.Other native languages (Cherokee, Arapaho, Powhatan, Seneca, Illinois, Pawnee, Arikara, Cheyenne, Tlingit, Maidu, Zuni, Navajo and hundreds more) have entirely different words of greeting and do not use the word hau.
The Maori translation for "Hauraki" is "Te Hau o te Raki".
Unfortunately, soul mates is not listed on the Omniglot website of useful phrases in Lakota Sioux. However, hello (hau), how are you (T—khe_khe yaœ? he?) and good morning (H’?ha?ni la??i) is listed.
The cast of Karl Hau - 1926 includes: Karl Hau
The word "hoeing" comes from Middle English "hau" or "hewe," which ultimately traces back to the Old English word "hawian," meaning "to cut with a hoe." It has its roots in Proto-Germanic and Proto-Indo-European languages.