The Ojibwa people call God , "The Creator" .
The Ojibwa call this being Kitchi-Manitou - the Great Mystery.
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i think ojibwe people use rattles for culture ocations
Ojibwe words meaning badger are midanask, misakak, misakakojish and misakakwijiish.
One is that they are woodland people. :@
"Eliminate" is what gangsters do to their rivals and no, the Ojibwe are still around today in both the USA and Canada. In fact there are many more of them now than at first contact with Europeans.
Anishinaabemowin (the language of the Ojibwe/Ojibwa/Chippewa people) has no such phrase.
i think ojibwe people use rattles for culture ocations
Ojibwe words meaning badger are midanask, misakak, misakakojish and misakakwijiish.
the answer is probably ojibwe.
There are many dialects of the Ojibwe language, but one way of saying it is aaniin ezhinikaazoyan? - this literally means how are you named? Another way is aniish eshnikaazyin? - what is your name?
The Ojibwe language--otherwise anglicized as Chippewa, Ojibwa or Ojibway and known to its own speakers as Anishinabe or Anishinaabemowin--is an Algonquian tongue spoken by 50,000 people in the northern United States and southern Canada. There are five main dialects of Ojibwe: Western Ojibwe, Eastern Ojibwe, Northern Ojibwe (Severn Ojibwe or Oji-Cree), Southern Ojibwe (Minnesota Ojibwe or Chippewa), and Ottawa (Odawa or Odaawa). The Ottawa have always been politically independent from the Ojibwe, but their language is essentially the same--speakers of all five dialects, including Ottawa, can understand each other readily. Many linguists also consider the Algonquin language to be an Ojibwe dialect, but it has diverged more and is difficult for Western Ojibwe speakers to understand. As its name suggests, Oji-Cree has borrowed many elements from Cree and is often written in the Cree syllabary rather than the English alphabet. On the whole Ojibwe is among the heartiest of North American languages, with many children getting raised to speak it as a native language.
The origin is Native American, either Potawatomi or Ojibwe.
Maengun or ma'iingan is the Ojibwe/Chippewa word for wolf.
I belive it is Gitchigumi (meaning Great Water or Great Lake)
"Miigwech" is an Ojibwe word in the Anishinaabe language, which is an indigenous language spoken by the Ojibwe people in North America. It is typically used to express "thank you" or gratitude.
Copper was mined , most notably on what is now Isle Royal in Lake Superior and along the south shore of the lake. Quillwork and sweetgrass weaving were Ojibwe crafts as was work with birch bark. Moccasins that are similar to the commercially-produced slippers of today were produced by Ojibwe. The seams were heated at fireside, which may have been the origin of the name Ojibwe, meaning "to roast until puckered." Wild rice is still harvested and marketed by Ojibwe. Dreamcatchers, which have become kitchy decorations in homes and vehicles originated among the Ojibwe and are still produced by many members of various Ojibwe nations.
One is that they are woodland people. :@
The origin of the Mississippi is - Ojibwe misi-ziibi, "big river"