The Siksika people speak:
Donald Frantz has written: 'Blackfoot dictionary of stems, roots, and affixes' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Siksika language, Siksika, English language, English 'Toward a generative grammar of Blackfoot (with particular attention to selected stem formation processes)' -- subject(s): Grammar, Algonquian languages, Siksika language 'Blackfoot grammar' -- subject(s): Grammmar, Siksika language
Does it mean "talk"???
In the Siksika language (also known as Blackfoot), the word "Siksika" means "black foot".The name Siksiká comes from the Blackfoot words sik (black) and iká (foot), with a connector s between the two words.
The Siksika put their belonging on the travois and the dogs dragged it.So the Travois is really important to the Siksika.
The Siksika lived with larger family groups in the praires.
The Siksika Tribe met their group needs by involving everyone into the buffalo hunt.
C. C. Uhlenbeck has written: 'Ontwerp van eene vergelijkende vormleer van eenige Algonkin-talen' -- subject(s): Algonquian languages, Comparative Grammar, Grammar, Comparative 'An English-Blackfoot vocabulary based on material from the southern Peigans' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Siksika language 'De woordafleidende suffixen van het Baskisch' -- subject(s): Basque language, Suffixes and prefixes 'A manual of Sanskrit phonetics' -- subject(s): Phonetics, Sanskrit language 'Original Blackfoot texts from the southern Peigans Blackfoot Reservation, Teton County, Montana' -- subject(s): Siksika language, Texts, Legends, Siksika Indians 'De oudere lagen van den baskischen woordenschat' -- subject(s): Basque language, Etymology 'Philological notes to Dr. J. P. B. de Josselin de Jong's Blackfoot texts' -- subject(s): Siksika language
They speak the Jawoyn language.
Hebrews speak the Hebrew language.
Most of them obviously speak Georgian. There are also speakers of related languages such as Mingrelian, but while Mingrelian is different enough to be seen as a distinct language, it is sociolinguistically speaking a dialect, because its speakers prefer regular Georgian as written language. There are minority languages such as Tsova-Tush a.k.a. Batsbi, which is related to Chechen, Abkhazian, which is a Circassian language, and Ossetian, which is related to Iranian languages.
Estonians speak Estonian as their native language.
Georgians speak Georgian as their native language.