Historically is has also been spelled "Navaho". That is how English speakers heard it. Navajo is the Spanish derived spelling. They got it from a Tewa word meaning "fields in the river bottoms".
Navajo speakers spell the Navajo Nation :" Naabeehó Bináhásdzo". In Navajo it is: Diné bikéyah or Dinétah. Dinéis the Navajo word for Navajo people.
a navajo
Dine bizaad (Navajo language) for crayon is: bee 'ak'e'elchíhí The mark above some vowels makes those high tone (not stressed) The mark alone means the consonant a glottal stop like the midddle of uh'oh.
Traditional Navajo names are completely different. You can't really translate English names to them at all. The Latin meaning of Deanna is divine or holy so it could be Diyin At'ééd, holy girl. That is not a really Navajo name though. Some traditional Navajo girl names are :Ádeezbaa'((she is going to lead a raid), Átsé Deezba (She is going first on a raid), Dlį́baa (Warrior Girl), Naazbaaa'(she went on a raid), or Asdzą́ą́łtsoii (yellow woman), and Ashiike Naakii ( the one with twin boys)
i love you
Navajo language
NAVAJO,
Because the Japanese could not break the Navajo language.
a navajo
In English is is called Navajo, In Navajo is it called Diné bizaad. There are over 300,000 Navajo, about 175,000- 200,000 speak Navajo.
Gary Witherspoon has written: 'Navajo kinship and marriage' -- subject(s): Navajo Indians, Marriage customs and rites, Kinship 'Language and art in the Navajo universe' -- subject(s): Navajo art, Navajo language, Navajo philosophy 'Navajo Kinship and Marriage'
the Navajo people in Southwestern United States
The United States. Navajo is a Native American language.
Yataałii anííníshníí is the Navajo phrase for "good morning my husband."
The Navajo and 11 Hopi soldiers used the the easiest of the Navajo language, to help America defeat the Japanese.
Dine bizaad (Navajo language) for crayon is: bee 'ak'e'elchíhí The mark above some vowels makes those high tone (not stressed) The mark alone means the consonant a glottal stop like the midddle of uh'oh.
"Dibé" means sheep in Navajo. The second syllable is high tone. Navajo is a tonal language
In Navajo, the word for pizza is "bilasáana." The term is derived from the English word "pizza," combined with the Navajo language structure. It reflects the way the Navajo language incorporates loanwords from other languages while adapting them to its phonetic system.