In the Cheyenne language, the word for beaver is:
hóma'e
The three Cheyenne words for blood, shown below, where taken from a English to Cheyenne dictionary: (I assume each word puts a different slant on the word, blood.) htsemá'eme (ni poss) ma'e (ni) ma'emá (mbp)
If you mean how is the sound a pronounced in Cheyenne words, it is always a as in father, except at the end of a word when it is whispered:pave-esheeva! = good morning [pah-vey-eh-sheev']If you mean is there a word in Cheyenne that corresponds with the English indefinite article "A", no there is no such word.
It's not french, although it may be derived from the french word for dog, "chien". Its origin is most commonly associated with the Dakota tribe word, "shahiyena", meaning "unintelligible speakers" or "speak incoherently" The word as a name has been also assigned a meaning in English, "the sun is rising" The most common uses for the word are in reference to the Cheyenne Indian nation of the western United States known as the Cheyenne and as the name of the capital city of Wyoming, United States, Cheyenne, Wyoming... Hope this helps...
Cheyenne's name is Cheyenne because that's what her parent's named her.
What were the Cheyenne Indians accomplishments
family
The word for 'beaver' in Welsh is 'afanc' or 'llostlydan'.
The Cheyenne word for a buzzard is written oo'he. It means "bare of feathers".
In the Cheyenne language the word for an animal's tail is heheva'xe or ma-htseva'xe
bevy means beaver in French
I believe beaver isn't written anywhere in THE WORD.
Yes, the word 'beaver' is a noun; a word for a type of mammal, a word for a thing.The noun 'beaver' is also an informal (slang) verb meaning to work hard.
The Cheyenne language has no specific word for cinnamon.
Cheyenne is not a Scottish Gaelic word.
A beaver is called 'un castor' in French.
the recouce of the cheyenne is the boffalo
In the phrase "sign of the sign beaver," the word "sign" is likely being used as a noun to indicate a symbol, indication, or gesture made by the beaver. The repetition of the word "sign" is likely for emphasis or poetic effect.