No native American language has a word that means exactly the same as the European idea of "queen" - it was European explorers who began calling native female chiefs "queens" and male chiefs "emperors" and "kings". None of these has anything to do with native American cultures.
There have been many thousands of different native American languages throughout the Americas, not just one, so on both counts it is impossible to answer your question.
no
Queen Isabella requiredQueen Isabella required the Conquistadors to read to Native populations a statement, warning them that if they did not comply, they would be punished severely. The statement had little effect because it was read to the Native people in Spanish, a language they did not know.
No she's African American.
English. She is also proficient in French.English
Queen Isabella requiredQueen Isabella required the Conquistadors to read to Native populations a statement, warning them that if they did not comply, they would be punished severely. The statement had little effect because it was read to the Native people in Spanish, a language they did not know.
I have listed this as part of another answer here: What_is_sign_for_king_in_asl
French, Italian, Spanish, Greek, Latin, and of course, her native tongue, English.
Well, Grace Kelly was an American Actress and she became queen of Monaco.
queen in Filipino language: reyna
Queen Lili'uokalani
"Queen" Alliquippa was a female chief of a Mingo band of Senecas from about 1742 to her death in 1754. The title "queen" is not appropriate for native American female band chiefs, nor is "king" for male leaders.
Little Queen was created in 1976.