There are many variations depending on the context in which you are referring to the Friend and their relationship to you. Check this site for examples http://www.freelang.net/online/ojibwe.php?lg=gb
As in most Algonquian languages, there is no word simply meaning "daughter" - you have to say "my daughter", "your daughter", "his daughter" and so on.
My daughter is nindaanis (with dialect variations such as indaan, indaanis, nindaan).
Intercourse - mzhiwewin
sex/have sex - mzhiwe
NiiJii
Finally I can have hetero sex!
This would depend on the context. Sex, as in gender, is "sexus, us, m" Sex is in love is "amor, amoris, m" Sexual union is "connubium, is, n"
It is French for "Lake of the torches". When French explorers first discovered the Ojibwe also referred to as Chippewa, Ojibwa living in the area that is now known as Lac du Flambeau in northern Wisconsin, they witnessed the Ojibwe spear fish from birchbark canoes with torches fixed to the front of the canoes during spawning season. The eyes of submerged fish became visible by torchlight and could be speared by the Ojibwe at night.
From the Ojibwe. Chimookomaan = "white man". Chimookomaanikwe = "white woman" Chimookomaaneg "white people".
it means having sex . to tell the truth Dominicans use that words.plus im Dominican and im a male.when a domincan says to you in a domnican talk.they might say loco tu tava singado it means were you having sex.
Memengwaa
nishwaaswi
otawug
ozhaawashko
mukadayikonayayg
I jnkjbbhv
Gawiin (gaween).
nahow
Poozhaaz in Ojibwe
Apegish wii-zhawenimik Manidoo
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?
That's beginning, not end isn't it?