In Navajo, pinon seeds are referred to as "bilasáana." The term specifically refers to the seeds of the piñon pine, which are an important traditional food source for the Navajo people. These seeds are often harvested and used in various dishes or as snacks.
Their staples were ones they grew: corn, beans, squash and mutton and goat meat. They also hunted for small game, and deer, elk, antelope and big horn. They gathered yucca fruit, pinon nuts, cactus fruit, berries, seeds, wild greens.
Harvesting pinon pine nuts occurs in the fall. It is best to harvest the entire cone and look for the dark seeds, as the lighter ones , the seed has been expelled.
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".
Dominique Pinon's birth name is Dominique Jean-Claude Pinon.
The word for ruler or leader in Navajo is naat'áanii.
Ruben Angel Pinon's birth name is Ruben Angel Pinon.
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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