Osiyo oginali (pronounced, Oh-see-yo oh-ge-nah-lee ) means "Hello my friend." in Cherokee.
There are multiple different Native American languages. The Cherokee language is the only Native language to have its own syllabary, created by Chief Sequoyah. The Cherokee syllabary was invented by George Guess/Gist, a.k.a. Chief Sequoyah, of the Cherokee, and was developed between 1809 and 1824. If you wanted to say "Hello." in Cherokee, you would say "Osiyo", pronounced "Oh-see-yo".
woof.
Hello, my name is... - Witam, mam na imię... (Witam, jestem...)
we say "Cześć/Witaj przyjacielu" If your friend is young, then young adults use slang. so you can just say hey(hej).
There is no such thing as a Native American language. Each tribe and sometimes each clan had its own language. You would have to be more specific as to tribe.
You say "Hello my friend!" in Yoruba language of the Western African origin as "Bawoni Oremi".
"Háu"
The Oklahoma Creek Native word for Hello... Hërs'cë!
There was no one language used by all native Americans who lived on the plains.
Uruguay isn't a language...... The native language is spanish so Hello in "Uruguay" is Hola
How to say..... Hello my friend in Creek
You can say "ਹੈਲੋ ਮੇਰੇ ਦੋਸਤ" (hello mere dost) to say "hello my friend" in Punjabi.
You say "hello" in the monkey language by throwing a banana to the person that you are greeting.
To say hello friend in Spanish you can say "hola amigo".
In Flemish, you say "hallo vriend" to mean 'hello friend'.
To say hello in Penobscot language, you can use the word "kwe."
Kamusta is how you say hello