father otosama
but oto meaning sound and sama is when someone has a addmeration for someone they will add sama to the end of there name
The Oto Indians traditionally ate a variety of foods, including wild game such as buffalo, elk, and deer. They also relied on fishing for their diet, catching catfish, sturgeon, and other freshwater fish. Additionally, they gathered and cultivated crops like corn, beans, and squash.
The Oto and Missouri tribes lived so closely together that they are often treated as one people: the Oto-Missouri. They originally lived in the area that later became the Iowa-Minnesota border, later migrating westwards to settle in Nebraska, near the Platte river. They lived mainly in earthlodges like the Mandans, Hidatsas and Arikaras, sometimes using tipis or bark lodges when out hunting. From this it is obvious that buffalo meat was eaten, but they were also farmers growing beans, maize, squash and pumpkins (the usual native crops).
* The first of the First Nation peoples were the Arikara. * The following Native American Tribes are also associated with Nebraska: * Arapahoe * Sioux * Oto * Omaha * Pawnee * Ponca * Cheyenne * Pawnee.
A few of the Great Plains Tribes. Arapaho IndiansArikara IndiansAssiniboine IndiansAtsina IndiansBrule IndiansCheyenne IndiansChipewyan IndiansCree IndiansCrow IndiansDakota IndiansHidatsa IndiansKainah IndiansMandan IndiansOglala IndiansOsage IndiansOto IndiansPiegan IndiansPonca IndiansQuapaw IndiansSarsi IndiansSiksika IndiansTeton IndiansWichita IndiansYanktonai Indians
The small tribes known today as Otoes, Iowas and Missouris were three related groups who are classed as Siouan; all three may have separated from the Winnebago people long ago. The Otoes and Missouris combined together as a result of wars and disease reducing their numbers.The dress of the Oto-Missouri people was influenced by the Plains tribes but retained many characteristics of the woodland Winnebagos: tight front-seamed leggings, long breechcloths, poncho-type shirt, all with short fringed edges. Leggings were gartered just below the knees, often with a beaded extension hanging down the side.Women wore strap-and-sleeve dresses, short leggings and typical one-piece soft-soled moccasins.Men wore their long hair in two braids, sometimes with a red-dyed deerhair roach attached at the back; a few shaved almost all the head; "turban style" headdress was common. Women wore a single braid at the back, sometimes with an elaborate hair-tie decorated with quills or beadwork.Bear claw necklaces were worn by important warriors and chiefs; some also owned "peace medals" given out by US Army officers and reservation superintendents.The link below takes you to an image of Oto chiefs visiting Washington in January 1881:
音 oto.
'Oto.'
Oto おと 音
Oto-chan means little brother. =3 Suffix can be changed (oto-chan, oto-kun, oto-san, they all mean the same thing) or removed. Also said as ototo-chan or ototo or whatever floats your boat.
The medical root word 'oto' refers to the ear.
gijitsu no oto
Bukimi na oto
There is no Hebrew word for possess. To express possession in Hebrew, you would just the particle "yesh" (יש) which means "there is" + the preposition le- (ל־) which means "to". For example: I possess a car = yesh li oto (יש לי אוטו), which literally means "there is to me a car". John possess a car = yesh leJohn oto We possess a car = yesh lanu oto
Name is based on an Oto Indian word that means "flat water," referring to the Platte River.
Oto (אותו) is a direct object pronoun meaning him or it.
Oto
The medical terminology combining form oto- means ear.