Just a few words for wind in some of the languages of North America are:
Lakota...............tate
Hidatsa..............hutsi
Cheyenne...........háa'háeše
Blackfoot...........sopo
Mahican.............kshaxen (blown by wind)
Delaware...........kschachan (the wind blows)
Powhatan..........kikithamots
Shawnee...........mis-sich-kon-ne
Maliseet.............wocawson
Mohegan............wutun
Mohawk..............kawera'shatste
Navajo...............niyol, nilchi
Apache..............nilchi
Jicarilla..............nlchi
Arikara (Sanish)..huutuúnu'
Shahaptin (Yakama)..huli
Hopi..................hukba
Shoshone...........neai
Yaqui.................jeeka
Chinook
Calypso
There are two federally recognized tribes currently in Wyoming: the Shoshone and the Arapahoe which share the Wind River Indian Reservation. Other Native American tribes which inhabited Wyoming along with the Shoshone and the Arapahoe include the Crow, the Cheyenne, and the Ute.
Hurricane comes from the Taino language word for wind.
There were four main wind gods: Boreas (north, winter) Zephyrus (west, spring) Notos (south, summer/autumn) Euros (east, autumn)
Chinook
In the wind is the prepositional phrase.
An east wind comes out of the east, a west wind comes out of the west and so on.
A classmate’s mother would not let wind-wolf Play at her house because he was an American Indian. - apex
The missing words from the will in "The Westing Game" were "North, South, East," and the missing word was "Wind." When put together, the complete phrase reads, "North, South, East, Wind."
"in the wind" is the prepositional phrase.
In the wind is the prepositional phrase.
The American Wind Energy Association currently lists North Dakota as the number one state for having the best wind energy resources. In 2009, North Dakota was ranked #6 for wind energy resources.
"in the wind" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence "the tree swayed gently in the wind."
"The answer, my friend, is blowing in the wind. The answer is blowing in the wind."
If the wind is coming from the north and moving to the south, then it would be called a "northerly" wind. Likewise, if it is coming from the south, it would be a "southerly" wind. why? is there a reasond?
The north wind blows from the north, typically heading in a southward direction.