There are MANY Native American languages. So you would have to ask about a word in a SPECIFIC Native American language. There is no one word for snowflake or any other word in just one overall Native American language.
Algonquian is a group of more than 25 different languages. You would have to be more specific.
Here is a list of Algonquian languages you can choose from:
1. Blackfoot Arapahoan (including Nawathinehena, and Besawunena
2. Arapaho proper
3. Gros Ventre
4. Cheyenne Central
5. Cree-Montagnais-Naskapi
6. Menominee Ojibwe-Potawatomi
7. Ojibwe
8. Potawatomi
9. Sauk-Fox-Kickapoo
10. Shawnee
11. Miami-Illinois
12. Mi'kmaq Abenaki
13. Western Abenaki
14. Eastern Abenaki
15. Malecite-Passamaquoddy
16. Massachusett
17. Narragansett
18. Mohegan-Pequot
19. Quiripi-Naugatuck-Unquachog
20. Mahican Delawarean
21. Munsee
22. Unami
23. Nanticoke-Piscataway
24. Powhatan
25. Etchemin
26. Shinnecock
Algonquian is not a tribe, it's a large grouping of tribes that speak Algonquian languages. Tribes in the Powhatan confederacy, which Pocahontas was part of, spoke an Algonquian dialect. That language is now extinct, though there are efforts to reconstruct it, which means they have an approximation of it based on historical word lists and still-existing Algonquian dialects.
An Algonquian is another word for an Algonquin - a member of an aboriginal North American tribe, closely related to the Odawa and Ojibwe, who reside mostly in Quebec - or the family of languages belonging to these people.
Why did the snowflake fall? it should have waited for the chicken to cross the road first.
no
p
Snowflake
Snowflake is one word. Used in an example sentence "the snowflake looks pretty under the microscope".
The word snowflake has two syllables. The syllables in the word are snow-flake.
algonquian
The regular ordinary Japanese person's word for snowflake is "seppen." But Japanese poets and writers use the term "yuki no hana" which literally means "snowflower" -- a prettier, more poetic word for the beautiful snowflake.
snowflake
снежинка. Chezhinka
The most likely root for the word "caucus" is Algonquian, from an indigenous language spoken by the Algonquian peoples in North America, where it originally referred to a council or assembly.
Algonquian
The word "papoose" is from the Algonquian language family, spoken by various Native American tribes across North America.
Yes, it is : snowflake.
Although listed as the Greek kaukos, and Latin caucum (drinking vessel), the root has also been suggested as the Algonquian word caucauasu (adviser). The word is an 18th century Americanism.The Algonquian word caucauasu