How do you say hush in Cherokee?
It would be pronounced as "Huh-ooh-shuh" - as a strict phonetic pronunciation of that word (depending on dialect for the "H's").
If you are asking how to say "Hush" in Tsalagi - you don't say it as the word does not exist - you could say Quiet "E-lu-we-i" (A-lew-ah-eee) but that is not exactly the same thing.
What is the math system used by the Cherokee Indians?
A base 10 math system, the same as anglo-saxon math.
How to spell Teresa in Cherokee?
Theresa = á–ᎴáŒ
If you can't see the cherokee font, it looks something like: ъδU
What is the Cherokee name for Sarah?
Sara and Sarah are the same root name, there is no direct translation to Tsalagi. Sarah means "Lady" or "Princess" dependent on who you ask. Lady, Woman, Female are all the same; "A-ge-yv" said as "A(h)gay-yanh"
Princess "U-gv-wi-yu-u-we-tsi-a-ti" said as "ewwghoyouwhehewwayeTyahtyay" (spoken very fast and all together)
How were the Cherokee removed from their land?
The United States government removed Native Americans from their ancestral lands so they could take the land. Treaties were broken with the nations, people were starved to death, they were walked to reservations, and children were moved to government schools. The Jackson philosophy concerning Native Americans was an"good Indian is a dead one." This was an awful philosophy that was put into action.
What are Cherokee homes are made of?
Historicly; the same things your homes were made of "wood, grasses, and dirt (made into plasters)."
Today: the same answer; the same things your home is made of today (Wood, grasses, and dirt (made into plasters)).
Why were the Cherokees allowed to stay in Georgia longer than the Creeks?
They sued Georgia because by Georgia trying to remove them from thier land they were performing a un-constitutional act.
Who is the youngest grandmother?
Supposedly it was Mum-zi a member of a harem in Nigeria who became pregnant at 8 and whose daughter also became pregnant at 8. (1884)
In more recent times, it was Rifca Stanescu at 21, who had her daughter at age 11, and granddaughter when her daughter was 10. (2011)
A 29 year old women who was in 7th grade and 13 when she gave birth to her daughter, and that daughter at the age of 16 just gave birth to a boy.
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26 - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/432463.stm
Why were Cherokee Indians given land?
Money - mostly gold. Gold was recently discovered on the lands so settlers wanted it without the risk of being killed for violating Indian law.
Where were the Cherokee located?
They were located in the Eastern Woodlands.
Also known as Western Tennessee, and Eastern Kentucky.
Until president Andrew Jackson made them go on the Trail of Tears.
They ended up in Northeastern Oklahoma.
Now they're located in Oklahoma.
What type of weapons and tools did the Cherokee use?
Why did the Cherokee Indians use bones and rocks
What year did Andrew Jackson issue the Indian removal act?
Congress passed the Indian Removal Act. It passed the Senate on 24 April 1830 and the House of Representatives on 26 May 1830. President Andrew Jackson signed it into law on 26 May 1830.
What did the Georgia Indians eat?
Since they were trapped in frigid, snowy Georgia, they ate slices of each others' frozen buttocks.
Name one of the major American Indian tribes in the US?
The Northern Cheyenne.
The Sioux.
The Arapahoe.
The Nez Perce.
The Navajo.
The Mendocino.
The Commanche.
The Ponca.
The Alamadea,
The Contra Costa.
The Shawnee.
The Mohave.
The Crow.
The Salish.
The Catawba.
The Yuma.
The Huron.
The Acoma.
The Chitimacha.
The Paiute
The Aleut.
The Zuni.
The Hopi.
The Anasazi.
The Chippewa.
The Miami.
The Chicasaw.
The Potomac.
The Kern.
The Madera'
The Mariposa.
The Ute.
The Iroquois.
The Choctaw.
The Cherokee.
The Seminole.
The Inuit.
The Mohawk, and probably a thousand more.
How did the Cherokee nation resist removal to the Indian territory?
they broke treaties and massacred Americans
Happy birthday in native American?
There are more than 700 different Native American languages spoken in North and South America.
If you are not sure which language you are talking about, here is a partial list of the most common Native American languages in North America:
Slavery does exist today, in many countries in Africa and Asia. Most of it doesn't look like the plantation slavery of the antebellum South in America, though some of that does exist, especially on cocoa plantations in Africa. Slavery today often consists of women or children sold into slavery as domestic servants or for prostitution.
Slavery occurs in many modern developed countries, as well as third world countries. It's mostly known as human trafficking. The United States, United Kingdom, Mexico, Thailand. Russia, Poland, China, France. are big contributors to this distributing crime.
it does not happen in america but in other countries, they still have it because it is free work
Slavery is growing and is still larger than it is ever was during the transatlantic slavery period. USA was responsible for massively endorsing one of the biggest attrocities in modern history. This was based solely on race, and while other countries played their part, America was one of the last world powers to criminalise it. USA does seem to forget they were largely responsible for the most racist travisty in history. Around 12 million slaves died in america alone (twice as many as jews murdered in WW2). Even though USA is ranked low on the global slavery index it is still present. No country is exempt from slavery. It is a massive global issue and one that the USA and american businesses still encourage by not insisting on slave labour in the production of purchased materials and goods. It is thought that 27 million people are currently enslaved globally and as to why, it is a method of free labour and exploitation for monetary gain.
What games did Tudor children play?
well the children entertained themselves by doind dances and going to school and learning new things and able to learn that and that is how they can entertain themselves.
Children in Tudor times did not go to school. There were no schools for common children, and the children of lordly households were taught by their parents or by the adults in households where children might be sent to learn the ways of families higher on the social scale than theirs (they were put out as servants), but the lessons were very different than now; children were expected to further the political and social agendas of their families or the families where their parents sent them, to fulfill the tasks that were assigned to them inside and outside their own households or in the households where they lived, to observe their parents' or their foster parents' behaviors and actions and to do what their parents or foster parents told them to do, without question. Children's lives were far less involved in play now then in survival. Life was very hard, and usually very short.
Common children did more or less the same, but their tasks were to help their modest households survive by working in the family business or working in the family kitchen, milking the family cow, taking the cow to the fields for its daily ration of grass and bringing her back home so that she wouldn't be stolen, caring for whatever other lifestock was owned by the family, helping to till and seed the fields, carrying water, wood, or whatever needed to be gathered or moved, gathering food, preparing food, maintaining the fire, helping with the brewing of beer or ale, and whatever else needed to be done. There probably was little time for play, and few toys. Life was hard and short, and the mentality was about survival not enjoyment. Few living now could imagine such an existence.
What were the roles of men women and children in the Cherokee culture?
As a general rule the roles were:
Men - ran 'government' did all hunting and most fishing. As a general term they carried out most 'manly' duties..
Women (at least in some tribes) owned all property and did the mundain tasks; gathering and cleaning of animals taken in the hunt.
Old people who could not do these things anymore were in charge of the children. This allowed them to learn from the wise for the roles they would fulfill later.