What did the Mohawk Indian's live in
long house da
Yes, the Mohawk Indians lived in longhouses. The long houses were large wood-frame buildings covered with sheets of elm bark. One Mohawk house could be a hundred feet long, and an entire clan lived in it.
Mohawk
lil twist mhawk is 6 inches
EXTREMELY AS LONG AS ITS NOT A FOHAWK! a fohawk is a tiny mohawk and LAME
Same time i spent growin my pubes
Ratiweras means thunder in Mohawk
Amsterdam, Rome, Schenectady, and Utica are all NY cities on the Mohawk River. The Mohawk River is a 140-mile long river in the U.S. state of New York.
In Mohawk, "yes" is pronounced as "ê" (pronounced like the English word "ay"). The pronunciation emphasizes a long "e" sound. Mohawk is a Native American language, and its phonetics can differ from English, so listening to a native speaker can help with accurate pronunciation.
The Night Elf Mohawk (grenade) is a special grenade that does not do any damage. It replaces the face and hair of anyone that gets caught in the "blast" with that of a likeness of "Mr. T" with Night Elf ears and a Mr T. Mohawk, hence, the Night Elf Mohawk. This is a special item that is not in the game at all times, and Blizzard only pulls it out every so often as it is one of those advertising gimmicks.
I guess you are referring to the so-called "Mohawk hairstyle" that many people today incorrectly believe was worn by the Mohawk Iroquois. This idea is totally false, so forget everything you ever heard about Mohawk native Americans wearing their hair like that. Unmarried Mohawk women and girls, like all the Iroquois group, wore their hair long and loose; married women wove it into one large braid at the back, doubled up and fastened with a buckskin strap. Mohawk men either wore their hair long and loose, or cut in a fringe at the front, or shaved all the head except for a round scalplock at the crown (back of the head), with a roach of dyed deer hair attached with a bone "spreader", to which was fixed a single feather. Nothing like the modern "Mohawk" hair style, which no historic Mohawk Iroquois would recognise.