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You need to be specific about which native American language you mean. Just a few out of many hundreds of possibilities are:

Sahaptin (Yakama dialect): ákak

Lakota: magášápa

Hidatsa: mida

Powhatan: cohonk (= wild goose, from its call)

Abenaki: wôbigilhakw or wôbtegua

Maliseet: wapi-kilahq or waptoq

Mohegan: káhôk

Naskapi: nisk

Ojibwe: nika or mikagoo or ikagoo or obizhashkisi or waab-wewe or apichikiwenzi

Cheyenne: héna'e

Arapaho: ne'na or nooksíísiic or nénebííhi'

Blackfoot: ómahkssa'áí

Tlingit: t'awakh awe

Inuit (InupiaQ): iqsrabutilik or mitilugruaq or kafuq

Aztec (Nahuatl): atlatlalcatl or concanauhtli or tlalalacatl or zoquicanauhtli

Shoshone: nekentan or kokax

Cherokee: sa-sa or dagula

Sanish (Arikara): koóhAt

In Plains sign language the word goose is expressed by making the sign for bird (hands flat at shoulders, making motion of wings) and then making a V-shape with the hands to show the way a flock of geese flies.

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Wiki User

14y ago

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