Naatsédlózhii léi' chxóóh bi íísaal!The roadrunner was really speeding off, throwing up dust! Navajo verbs often change form based on point of view, but bééhózin doesn’t need to change. Bi héííníjaa'ísh? Do not you know where the problem might be? The Navajo word ma’ii (or mą’ii) is the coyote. Though leprosy is not common on the Navajo reservation, it is a common term to Christian Navajos who read about leprosy from the Navajo Bible. He got mad and divorced her. The same problem is when you place your tank in the technology tree. When the US figure skaters skated, they didn't do a good job. _Aslain_logs.zip May 9, 2015; 5 replies yasenkrasen session stats - automatic reset. You can check it out by clicking on this link. For example, shił bééhózin becomes nił bééhózin or bił bééhózin when … Only original from the game is displayed. “I know” -> “you know” or “he/she/it knows”). Éí biniinaa t'óó shi naareel nahonishin. A collection of useful phrases in Navajo (Diné Bizaad), an Athabaskan language spoken in Arizona and New Mexico in the USA. Being "lightly buzzed" but not totally drunk has a similar variant. To opravdu nas... naštve Before I realized it, I was buzzed. In Diné bahane’, coyote’s cunning way was put to use against the Black God (or Fire God or Black Man) – himself a kind of trickster – when he stole the way to make fire. If there were direct “gods” in Navajo tradition, they would have to be the purely spiritual figures that came before the First World. Click on the to hear the phrase in Navajo. Je označena ikonou pro zaměření. The general new term for cancer is, "atsíís bitłóól dah díníisééh dóó baáte hólǫ́ yileeh," which describes body cells being diseased & growing uncontrollably. Ahoj, za mě optimálně od 20:00, ale 19:30 bych asi taky stíhal, ►SOBOTA 29.06. od 19:30◄ Súťaž o lode GEORGIA + loď podla výberu + 30+ kódov. Us? Když se ta loď znovu objeví, tak moje sekundární baterie opět začnou pálit. Tom éí bił níjoobał dah yinááyoo'ááł!Tom is carrying around the cell phone! Most also speak English. Useful phrases in Navajo. (He got mad, packed up, and went home) Navajo phrase (2): k'adée náhá tl'iid This phrase means "I'm exhausted or dying." Shi I-Pod bee t'óó nihi deich'iish! … I'm a pimp! _Aslain_logs.zip Did you bring in the girls/nail them? AFI wáadzoh deich'iish! Naa hane'ígíí nits'áá' néé'íí'!I saw your MySpace profile! Alex shił ahidíltléé'. However, by the beginning of the 20th century, a number of religious texts, grammars, and dictionaries were compiled by missionaries, each of whom used a different writing system. Do you know where it might be wrong?