You need to be specific about which native American language you mean. Just a few out of many hundreds of possibilities are:
Sahaptin (Yakama dialect): ákak
Lakota: magášápa
Hidatsa: mida
Powhatan: cohonk (= wild goose, from its call)
Abenaki: wôbigilhakw or wôbtegua
Maliseet: wapi-kilahq or waptoq
Mohegan: káhôk
Naskapi: nisk
Ojibwe: nika or mikagoo or ikagoo or obizhashkisi or waab-wewe or apichikiwenzi
Cheyenne: héna'e
Arapaho: ne'na or nooksíísiic or nénebííhi'
Blackfoot: ómahkssa'áí
Tlingit: t'awakh awe
Inuit (InupiaQ): iqsrabutilik or mitilugruaq or kafuq
Aztec (Nahuatl): atlatlalcatl or concanauhtli or tlalalacatl or zoquicanauhtli
Shoshone: nekentan or kokax
Cherokee: sa-sa or dagula
Sanish (Arikara): koóhAt
In Plains sign language the word goose is expressed by making the sign for bird (hands flat at shoulders, making motion of wings) and then making a V-shape with the hands to show the way a flock of geese flies.
There are more than 700 different Native American languages spoken in North and South America. You will have to be more specific. If you are not sure which language you are talking about, here is a partial list of the most common Native American languages in North America:
There are more than 700 different Native American languages spoken in North and South America.
If you are not sure which language you are talking about, here is a partial list of the most common Native American languages in North America:
It's Native American for Little Duck
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 Native Americans and the word is a Native American word.
There is no one "native American" language, so there is no one word- there are dozens of words.
The v in Native American is part of the word "Native". It doesn't stand for anything.
It is definitely a Greek word, but it might also be a word in one of the hundreds of different Native American languages as well.
There are MANY Native American languages, not just one. So you need to ask for your translation in a particular Native American language, not just in "Native American."