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Native American Languages

Information and translations for Native American languages. Please note each tribe has its own language, and there is no single "Native American" language.

1,626 Questions

When did native Americans come here?

We don't know most of the history are theroys

Answer:

Science indicates that there were several migrations of Asian peoples into North America starting some 14,000 years ago. These original immigrants spread southwards from Alaska by land or along the coast.

First Nations' traditions indicate that their people were formed here ab initio by the creative deities of their specific religions.

What languages were spoken by the Incas?

The language the Incas spoke was called Quechua, pronounced like 'catch-wa'. Quechua still exists as a language today in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru with 10.4 million speakers.

Do native Americans have a written language?

Yes, most of them do. I have a friend that lives in New Mexico and is part of a Native American Indian tribe. She speaks English but has a accent. Many of the Indians were born learning their tribal language and have learned English over the years.

What languages were spoken by Adena Indians?

The Adena Indians are a culture which dates back into prehistoric times. Very little is known about them outside of the archaeological findings which have been unearthed. No one is sure what language the ancient Adena people may have spoken.

How do native Americans make jewelry?

Depending on where you live, Natives in your country may have used different things to make jewelry. In North America, Native Americans originally used natural things like dulled porcupine quills, stones, and other natural substances found in the forest. When the first French explorer, Jacques Cartier, arrived in eastern Canada in the early 1500's, he traded with the Mi'kmaq and the Haudenousaunee for furs and other natural things found in North America. In exchange, Cartier gave the tribes glass and clay beads which they used to further decorate their jewelry with.

I hope that this answer helped you! You may also want to look at different textbooks or Wikipedia articles for more information. :)

What is the American word of flat?

The American word for "flat" typically refers to something level or lacking elevation. It can also describe a surface that is smooth and even. In certain contexts, "flat" can refer to a type of tire that has lost air or is deflated. Additionally, in slang, "flat" can mean dull or lacking in excitement.

What is the Native American word for dinosaur or dragon?

There are more than 700 different Native American languages spoken in North and South America. You will have to be more specific. 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
  • Yurok
  • Zuni

How do the Native Americans talk?

The there were hundreds of Native languages. Depending on how you count there were around 300. There were probably a higher number but some went extinct to early to be documented. They are grouped by linguists into 29 language families and 27 language isolates. An example of a language family is English is in Indo European which includes Hindi, Greek, Russian, Latin, German, and Persian and many others. Hebrew is in the same family as Arabic. Turkish is in a family with Kazakh and Finnish.

California alone had 74 languages in 18 families.

Linguists have long tried to ink these language families to ones in Asian with little success. Inuti languages have close relationships with speakers across the Bering sea in Russia. It is thought that Na Dene ( athabaskan) family is related to the Yenisei (like Ket) languages east of Lake Baikal.

The 19th century American folk belief that there is some relation to Hebrew has no basis in reality. It was incorporated into Mormon belief by Joseph Smith.

One can learn many native languages today from college classes, headstart classes, books, cds, dvds, apps and computer programs or visit a tribe such as Navajo or Hopi where the language is still living and used by many people.

Answer

Most Native Americans speak English. But some do not. On the Navajo Nation, in the southwest, it is estimated that about 2.9% of the people, mostly elderly are monolingual in Navajo. That would be about 5000 people. About 200,000 speak Navajo and English (2/3rds). Many elderly Yup'ik are monolingual as well. The last monolingual Chickasaw speaker died this year. There are about 50 monolingual Cherokee speakers. On the Crow nation about half the population speaks Crow (Apsáalooke). Cree speakers are about 70,000. Inuktitut are 36,000 (100,000 speakers of all Inuit languages). There are about 50,000 Ojibwe speakers. There are many more.

In Canada the Province of Nunavut has Inuit as its official language as well as English and French. About 69% of the population speaks it.

Also, one should note that not all Native American speaker are in the US and Canada. Mexico is also in North America and many people speak other languages than Spanish. Here are some estimates of speakers of the 12 biggest groups: Nahuatl-- 2 million, Mayan - 6 million, Mixtec-475,000, Zapotec--450,000, Otomi--285,000, Totonac--240,000, Mazatec--220,000, Chinantec- 135,000, Mixe--130,000, Purepecha--125,000, Tlapanec--120,000, Tarahumara--85,000.

Note that Native Americans do speak English but they have their own language as well. Native Americans consist of many tribes. Each Native American tribe has their own language and that tribe may or may not still speak it. There are 310 reservations in the United States but not all native American tribes have their own reservation.

What is your name Sharon in American Indian language?

There are about 700 different Native American languages.

But there is no such language as "Indian".

What does Courtney mean in native American language?

Courtney is a Unisex name of English origin meaning 'From The Court'. Courtney comes from an aristocratic English surname which was derived either from the French place name Courtenay.

How do the Native Americans say hello?

There are multiple different Native American languages. The Cherokee language is the only Native language to have its own syllabary, created by Chief Sequoyah. The Cherokee syllabary was invented by George Guess/Gist, a.k.a. Chief Sequoyah, of the Cherokee, and was developed between 1809 and 1824. If you wanted to say "Hello." in Cherokee, you would say "Osiyo", pronounced "Oh-see-yo".

What are some words in the crow language?

Crow is classified as a Siouan language, although it takes a language expert to demonstrate the connections between Crow and Lakota or Crow and Assiniboine.

There are some difficult sounds in Crow that you don't find in English: for example the letter X is used for a throaty khsound and the letter l can sound like l,d,n, or r. Here are a few words in the Crow language:

isaa.........................large

aapa.......................leaf

cheeta....................wolf

bia..........................woman

apa.........................bird

aluuta.....................arrow

balaxxii...................bow, weapon

iittaashtee..............shirt

bitchii......................knife

iichiili.......................horse

maxpe....................sacred

daxpitse.................bear

baapaatua.............sign language

iis...........................face

kahe......................welcome

shipita....................black

shua.......................blue, green

chia.........................white

hisshi......................red

alaxchii....................war deeds, coups

ahu.........................many

bachee....................man

bishka.....................dog

ashi........................teepee

tatee......................good

bili..........................water

bii...........................stone

shiili.......................yellow

It is feature of the Crow language that when referring to the name of a person, you add -sh to the end. So taking the words alaxchii and ahu above you can make the name Alaxchia-ahush, or Plenty Coups (Many War Achievements), a famous Crow chief.

Most people today believe that Native Americans used the term "White Men" to describe the settlers, explorers, soldiers and other newcomers. In the Crow language, the term is baashchiili,literally "yellow-person".

Why do Native Americans speak a variety of languages today?

It is estimated that around 500 different languages were originally spoken on the North American continent; add those in Central and South America and the number is in the thousands.

The view of language experts is that there was not just a single wave of migrations from Asia into the Americas, but many migrations over a very long period of time, by many different prehistoric peoples. Some of these would have been on foot, followings herds of animals to be hunted, others would have been by boat down the west coast.

How do you say willow in Cree?

In the Cree language the word for a willow tree or bush is nîpisîy, a willow stick is nîpisîhtak, and a red willow is mihkwâpemak.

What do native Americans of the great plains eat?

As with all Native tribes, the Plains tribes lived off the land. Although the buffalo was their main staple, they did hunt deer, elk and small game. Also the women would gather berries, roots and nuts. In addition, they would trade with other tribes for different kinds of food.

What languages were spoken by Wyandot Indians?

The Menominee tribe spoke the Algonquian language in Northern Wisconsin and Michigan. Not much people speak it anymore though, only elders and people who wish to know more of their culture. But this is what I know.

What is the native American word for Wabash?

Early French explorers met the Illinois tribe and tried to communicate with them without any clear understanding of their language. When they asked the name of a major river, the natives said ouabouskigou, which the French did not understand and the nearest they could pronounce it was "oubache".

The meaning of the native word is unknown - it may not even be the name of the river, but some comment about the French explorers! Later English-speaking Americans changed it to Wabash, which has been applied to both a river and a city in Indiana.

What were early European explorers who came to the new world looking for?

My a. noob's Answer

This is some things i have gathered and think is right. if you could take a look and add anything, your welcome to.

Christopher Columbus stumbled upon the New Wold in the hope of finding an easy water route to the Pacific. Another expedition funded by John Jacob Astor took place around 1810. He was hoping to make money by setting up a fur-trading project. His project was not a success. hi i like cheese. to find out more go to infinitycomics.ca!!!!!

HI!!!!! GO TO INFINITYCOMICS.CA OR ELSE

What is the Native American translation of sky dancer?

There are around 300 American Indian languages north of Mexico alone, so you might want to try to narrow the question! Anyway, one way to say "Sky Dancer" in Cherokee, and probably not the one a native speaker would choose, is "Halisgia ehi galunlati" (hah-lee-ess-gee-ah eh-hi gah-lun-lah-tee), lit. "He/she/it dances in the sky."

How do you say silver 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

What did the Indians call squash corn and beans?

There is not single answer to this because there were there about 296 languages north of Mexico and they were in about 29 unrelated families and there were 27 isolates.

As a comparison, German, Icelandic, French, English, Russian, Greek are all in one family. Hebrew and Arabic are in another, Finnish and Hungarian might be in another.

For ONE language, Navajo, Diné bizaad, with 180,000 speakers today in the southwest,

  • corn is: naadą́ą́ʼ
  • beans: naaʼołí
  • squash: naayízí

Corn because it moved north from Mexico often has a shared similar name in nearby languages but still there are 100s of different names

How did the native american come to canada?

They used canoes for transportation over water and walked anywhere else. Mind you they had things like snow shoes, and various tools and clothes to help them brave the sometimes crazy winters here. Of course things are different today.