The thing closest to a "ghost" in Navajo culture is: ch'į́įdii. This is sometimes spelled in non standard more folk spelling as chindi. The marks over the first vowel make it high tone, followed by a low tone i it makes it falling tone. The marks under the two ii make them nasalized, a bit as if there was a "n" in the word. Two ii are said as in "machine". The ch' is different than ch. It is said by holding your breath in your throat and saying ch.
This is what is left with the body and bones after someone has died. It is all the bad or evil spiritual stuff they were made of or that they did. The rest of the spiritual parts of someone are thought to drift away and maybe become parts of things just as of the parts of your body become part plants and animals and the soil and atmosphere. This is what makes dead things and bones dangerous in traditional Navajo thought, they can disrupt your balance and make you spiritually or physically sick.
Another way could be: níłchʼi --which means spirit.
native American is not a tribe.
there are many native American tribes/nations & each have their own language, if not a dialect within a language. you need to be MUCH more specific as to which language you want it translated into.
shamon
It depends on which of the 400 different native American languages you are referring to.
native American warriors
How do you pronounce the Native American word techihhlia?
there is no such word in the native American vocabulary.
What is the translation to English of the Native American word Patalaska
Zuni was a Native American word.
Kansar is not a Native American word. It is a Gujarati word (from Gujarat, India). It is a type of dessert.
There are thousands of Native American languages, each would have a different word.
The English translation for the Native American word for sun is "sun."
The Native Americans and the word is a Native American word.
It was a new religious movement incorporated into numerous Native American belief systems.