hai is the word for winter in Dine' bizaad (Navajo language).
Note the vowels are low tone. If you say it high tone as in "háí " it becomes the word for "who"
Winter is the time when stories can be told. When the thunder sleeps. It is the time people get ready hay for livestock and get supplies ready for big winter snow storms and muddy roads.
There are two ways you can say "Navajo" in Navajo. Dinémeans "The People" in Navajo. The Navajo call themselves "Diné". Nabeehó is another way of saying Navajo.
The Navajo word for a caterpillar is ch'osh ditł'ooi.
In Navajo, "nosey" can be translated as "T'a'í."
Pam is not a Navajo given name. You would say it as the English "Pam".
If there is, no one knows it. Navajo is a unknown language used in the world war.
The word for ruler or leader in Navajo is naat'áanii.
Navajo has different words for different types of storm, as you would expect among people who traditionally spent much of their time outdoors in close contact with nature.A thunderstorm is da'di'níigo nahałtinA sandstorm is Łeezh bił níyolA big hailstorm is nílótsohA big snowstorm is yastsohA tornado or hurricane is níyoltsoh
The Navajo Nation is cold in the winter with snow and hot in the summer. It is high elevation desert and steppe with mountains.
In Navajo, "little girl" is said as "bik'éí bini'".
The Navajo word for dawn is hayííłką; early dawn is yidiiską.
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Haa'goh