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Chippewa Indians

The Chippewa or Ojibwe refer to the same people and are one of the most populous and widely distributed Indian groups in North America. The tribe call themselves Anishinabe in their own language, which means 'original person.' Lands include Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Ontario and Manitoba.

419 Questions

What is the daily life of ojibwa?

Pretty interesting if you ask me, they hunted, fished, encountered bears, all sorts of stuff.

How do you spell i love you in ojibwe language?

There isn't one. As Russell Means explained it, "love" is a white man's word for when they can't explain what they feel or mean. Many Native American cultures do not have an equivalent work for love. It is expressed through actions and other words.

How did the ojibwe come?

The Ojibwe tribe or people are one of the group of Anishnabe peoples. The name for these same people in the US is Chippewa.

According to Seven Fires Prophecies, they originated on the Eastern Coast of the US among the Abenaki People living there. The Abenaki speak a variety of the Algonquian Language as do all Anishnabe peoples.

At the urging of the first prophecy, that a light skinned race would come and destroy the spirituality and very lives of those native peoples who remained along the eastern seaboard, the Anishnabe left en masse (in ten thousand canoes), moving west looking for the turtle shaped Island and the land where food grew on water (Wild rice, which they finally found in the Great Lakes). Along the way in this journey to the West, groups settled out at various places and became known as the Odawa, Potowotomy, Ojibway etc...

Ojibway/Ojibwe was one of the groups that traveled furthest to the West looking for the "promised land" of the prophecy...

What do Ojibwa farmers use for farming?

they use some kind of tools and planted whatever kind of food they grew :)

What were ojibwa women roles?

The Ojibwa women would take care of the children and cook and help the men get the wild rice by using a stick to knock it in the canoe and make wigwams.

How did the chippewa tribe survive?

By getting permission to lead there people on the trails.

What do Chippewa Indians wear?

The Chipewyan, Lakehead, Athabaskan and Yellowknives lived from Hudson's Bay and the Churchill River area to Great Slave Lake; they dressed very much as Paleao-Indians dressed when they first migrated into the Americas many thousands of years ago.

Men wore finely-tanned caribou hide clothing (with the hair left on for winter use, but scraped off for summer clothes). A breechclout was often the only thing worn during the warm months; skin trousers were sometimes attached to moccasins. Shirts reached to the thigh and were belted - the lower edge front and back came to a point and the entire shirt was fringed and sometimes painted yellow.

Women wore a shirt like those of the men, but reaching the ankles or the calf, belted and not pointed but straight along the bottom edge. Often these were made large enough for a baby to be carried inside, on the mother's back. Leggings were tied below the knees.

Early moccasins were often sewn to the leggings; boots of caribou skins were also made with soles of tough moose hide.

Parkas of caribou hide, trimmed with fur, were worn by men and women and children wore entire suits of rabbit fur for warmth.

Both sexes wore their hair very long and loose, but men sometimes cut theirs in different ways. Headbands of fur or skin were popular, or fur caps; mittens of moose or caribou skin kept the hands warm.

The Chipewyan people were slow to adopt European style clothes such as neck scarves, headscarves, blouses, shoes and dresses.

See links below for images:

How do you say you are welcome in Ojibwa?

I guess you mean "I love you".

In the Chippewa, Ojibwa or Anishinaabe language you say gizahgin or gi-zaagi`in, from the verb zaagi`, meaning to love somebody.

What are some special crafts that a chippewa Indians make?

The Ojibwe, Ojibwa or Chippewa people made very many items using the materials from their own environment.

Being a northerly tribe they had very harsh winters to cope with and made distinctive snowshoes; they made beadwork and quillwork to decorate clothing and other items; they made smoking pipes of stone, some with lead inlay; drums were made of rawhide stretched and laced over wooden frames; they made mats of cattail stems for flooring or wigwam covers; wooden hawk and owl effigies were placed on graves; wood was also used for bows and arrows, cradleboards and canoes. Bark containers could be sealed with pitch or balsam gum to create buckets capable of carrying water without leaking. There are many more examples.

What kind of homes did Ojibwa Indians have?

Not all Woodland Indians built longhouses. Some built wigwams.

A wigwam was a round building with a round top. It was made from tree logs, covered again with bark. Some were additionally covered with mats or hide. Some were quite large - about 6 feet long. There were huge rush mats in front of the fire, and brightly dyed mats on the walls. The women made the wigwam as colorful as they could. Extended families - kids, parents, and grandparents - all lived together in one wigwam.

A wigwam is not a tipi. A tipi is totally portable. It is made with long poles covered with hides. Some wigwams were fixed shelters. Some were a mix of permanent and portable.

The Ojibwa, for example, made their wigwams by covering a wood frame with hide and then covering the hide with bark. When an Ojibwa family moved to a new location, the hide was rolled up and taken with them. The frame stayed. When they returned the following year, or several years later, they simply unrolled the covering they always carried, and placed it on the frame. If a frame was not available, they would make a new one.

Today, Native Americans live in houses just like yours and mine. But in olden times, many parts of the country had its own distinctive style of home.

by,

Rahim

Did the Ojibwa Tribe's food differ according to the seasons?

Yes because some foods could not grow in different seasons

How do you say thunder bird in ojibwa?

Waabishkimiimiig (single vowels have short vowel sounds, double vowels have long vowel sounds)

What are the midewiwin?

"The name Midewiwin (also spelled Midewin and Medewiwin) is derived from a Native American term for the Grand Medicine Society, a super-secret society of which today members would nominally be called by others than the Medewiwin, Shamans. Tribal groups who had such societies include the Ojibwa, Chippewa, Ottawa, and Potawatomi, the last of whom were prominent residents of the Midewiwin National Tallgrass Prairie region from the mid 1700’s to the early to mid-1800’s. According to the Potawatomi, Mide’ or Mida (pronounced mid-day), means ‘mystic’ or ‘mystically powerful.’ The curing rituals performed by the members of the Midewiwin relied heavily on a tradition that incorporated mystical elements arising from the beliefs about the spirits that protected the A-nish’-in-a’ beg (term used by the Ottawa, Potawatomi, Ojibwa, and Menomonee to describe “the original people." http://www.geocities.com/the_wanderling/midewiwin.html

How did Native Americans make bowls?

None of the pure Plains tribes made any ceramic pottery of any kind - it was too heavy and too fragile to be constantly transported by horse from camp-site to camp-site. Some of the marginally Plains groups such as the Omaha made wooden bowls from burrs on trees, but there is no evidence for the Sioux tribes doing this.

Cooking was generally done in a sack made from the stomach of a buffalo suspended on a wooden frame over the fire; large spoons of buffalo or mountain sheep horn would then be filled from this "pot" and handed to each of the diners, so the spoons also acted as bowls. Some foods, such as sausages made from stuffed intestines, needed no bowl. Many buffalo horn spoons survive in museums - some have beadwork decoration around the handle.

See links below for images:

What did the Ojibwa do for money?

did you know that the ojibwa people speak English but most native

What were the medicines the ojibwa Indians use?

No we didn't have "Shamans". Natural plants and herbs were used but also sweat lodges and dances. Cool water as well.

How did the chippewa tribes build their homes?

they lives in wig warms and tepees and also sometimes in rock shelter

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:



  • Abnaki, Eastern
  • Achumawi
  • Afro-Seminole Creole
  • Ahtena
  • Alabama
  • Aleut
  • Alsea
  • Angloromani
  • Apache, Jicarilla
  • Apache, Kiowa
  • Apache, Lipan
  • Apache, Mescalero-Chiricahua
  • Apache, Western
  • Arapaho
  • Arikara
  • Assiniboine
  • Atakapa
  • Atsugewi
  • Barbareño
  • Biloxi
  • Blackfoot
  • Caddo
  • Cahuilla
  • Carolina Algonquian
  • Carolinian
  • Catawba
  • Cayuga
  • Chamorro
  • Chehalis, Lower
  • Chehalis, Upper
  • Cherokee
  • Chetco
  • Cheyenne
  • Chickasaw
  • Chimariko
  • Chinook
  • Chinook Wawa
  • Chippewa
  • Chitimacha
  • Choctaw
  • Chumash
  • Clallam
  • Cocopa
  • Coeur d'Alene
  • Columbia-Wenatchi
  • Comanche
  • Coos
  • Coquille
  • Cowlitz
  • Cree, Plains
  • Crow
  • Cruzeño
  • Cupeño
  • Dakota
  • Degexit'an
  • Delaware
  • Delaware, Pidgin
  • Esselen
  • Evenki
  • Eyak
  • Galice
  • Gros Ventre
  • Gwich'in
  • Halkomelem
  • Han
  • Havasupai-Walapai-Yavapai
  • Hawai'i Creole English
  • Hawai'i Pidgin Sign Language
  • Hawaiian
  • Hidatsa
  • Ho-Chunk
  • Holikachuk
  • Hopi
  • Hupa
  • Ineseño
  • Inupiaq
  • Inupiatun, North Alaskan
  • Inupiatun, Northwest Alaska
  • Iowa-Oto
  • Jemez
  • Jingpho
  • Kalapuya
  • Kalispel-Pend D'oreille
  • Kansa
  • Karkin
  • Karok
  • Kashaya
  • Kato
  • Kawaiisu
  • Keres, Eastern
  • Keres, Western
  • Kickapoo
  • Kiowa
  • Kitsai
  • Klamath-Modoc
  • Koasati
  • Koyukon
  • Kumiai
  • Kuskokwim, Upper
  • Kutenai
  • Lakota
  • Luiseño
  • Lumbee
  • Lushootseed
  • Mahican
  • Maidu, Northeast
  • Maidu, Northwest
  • Maidu, Valley
  • Makah
  • Malecite-Passamaquoddy
  • Mandan
  • Mattole
  • Menominee
  • Meskwaki
  • Miami
  • Michif
  • Micmac
  • Mikasuki
  • Miwok, Bay
  • Miwok, Central Sierra
  • Miwok, Coast
  • Miwok, Lake
  • Miwok, Northern Sierra
  • Miwok, Plains
  • Miwok, Southern Sierra
  • Mohave
  • Mohawk
  • Mohegan-Montauk-Narragansett
  • Mokilese
  • Molale
  • Mono
  • Muskogee
  • Nanticoke
  • Natchez
  • Navajo
  • Nawathinehena
  • Nez Perce
  • Nisenan
  • Nooksack
  • Nottoway
  • Obispeño
  • Ofo
  • Ohlone, Northern
  • Ohlone, Southern
  • Okanagan
  • Omaha-Ponca
  • Oneida
  • Onondaga
  • Osage
  • Ottawa
  • Paiute, Northern
  • Pawnee
  • Piro
  • Piscataway
  • Plains Indian Sign Language
  • Pomo, Central
  • Pomo, Eastern
  • Pomo, Northeastern
  • Pomo, Northern
  • Pomo, Southeastern
  • Pomo, Southern
  • Potawatomi
  • Powhatan
  • Purepecha
  • Purisimeño
  • Quapaw
  • Quechan
  • Quileute
  • Quinault
  • Salinan
  • Salish, Southern Puget Sound
  • Salish, Straits
  • Sea Island Creole English
  • Seneca
  • Serrano
  • Shasta
  • Shawnee
  • Shoshoni
  • Siuslaw
  • Skagit
  • Snohomish
  • Spanish
  • Spokane
  • Takelma
  • Tanacross
  • Tanaina
  • Tanana, Lower
  • Tanana, Upper
  • Tenino
  • Tewa
  • Tillamook
  • Timbisha
  • Tiwa, Northern
  • Tiwa, Southern
  • Tlingit
  • Tohono O'odham
  • Tolowa
  • Tonkawa
  • Tsimshian
  • Tübatulabal
  • Tunica
  • Tuscarora
  • Tutelo
  • Tututni
  • Twana
  • Umatilla
  • Unami
  • Ute-Southern Paiute
  • Ventureño
  • Wailaki
  • Walla Walla
  • Wampanoag
  • Wappo
  • Wasco-Wishram
  • Washo
  • Wichita
  • Wintu
  • Wiyot
  • Wyandot
  • Yakima
  • Yaqui
  • Yokuts
  • Yuchi
  • Yuki
  • Yupik, Central
  • Yupik, Central Siberian
  • Yupik, Pacific Gulf
  • Yurok
  • Zuni

Where was the longest arrow shot by a recurve bow?

the answer is 200ft!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!