yáʼátʼééh is hello
-- ya'a (High tone with a glottal stop) T'eeh ( T holding breath and high tone ee as in "met" but longer and a h sound at the end- it's hard to hear)
y�¡�¼�¡t�¼�©�©h --is hello in Navajo
The marks over the vowels make them HIGH tone, Navajo is tonal. The marks between the two "a"s is a consonant called a glottal stop (like in English Uh'oh). The T' is different than a T is a way we don't do in English. Hold your breath in your throat and explosively say a T sound. T and T' are different in Navajo
If by "Dene" you mean Dine Bizaad (Navajo), the word yá'át'ééh is used for hello, good afternoon or good evening.
If you really mean Dene (Chipewyan) the word hóʔą is a greeting used to welcome someone to your dwelling (literally = there's room). The term é-kla-netʔé-a means "how are you" and is used as a greeting.
In Navajo, "hello" is said as "Yá'át'ééh".
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.
Yah'ah' teh' ah'bin'eh - Hello, good morning in Navajo
In Comanche you say marúawe (hello to one person); marúawebukwu (hello to 2 people); marúaweka (hello to a group).
No, "ya'at'eeh" in Navajo does not mean "What the hell." "Ya'at'eeh" is a common Navajo greeting that translates to "hello" or "greetings." It is used to say hello or to acknowledge someone in a positive and respectful manner. The phrase "What the hell" would be translated differently in Navajo.
ya'at'teeh
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".
Sounds like the common way an English speaker says the Navajo word for "Hello."Yá'át'ééhThe Navajo name for the community is Tʼáá Bííchʼį́įdii.
The word Yatahey (yat ta hey ya) is Navajo for "Hello"
You say "hello" in English.