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Ꭲ i Ꮳ tsa Ꮅ li Ꮝ s Ꭰ a Ꮑ ne Ꮧ di Ꭲ Ꮳ Ꮅ Ꮝ Ꭰ Ꮑ Ꮧ i tsa li s a ne di itsalisanedi Ꭴ u Ꮅ li Ꭹ gi Ᏻ yu Ꮝ s Ꭰ a Ꮕ nv Ꮑ ne Ꭴ Ꮅ Ꭹ Ᏻ Ꮝ Ꭰ Ꮕ Ꮑ u li gi yu s a nv ne uligiyusanvne Ꭴ u Ꮒ ni Ᏸ ye Ꮝ s Ꭲ i Ᏹ yi Ꭴ Ꮒ Ᏸ Ꮝ Ꭲ Ᏹ u ni ye s i yi uniyesiyi Ꮎ na Ꮝ s Ꭲ i Ꮿ ya Ꮎ Ꮝ Ꭲ Ꮿ na s i ya nasiya For these examples ...
Today, Ojibwe artists commonly incorporate motifs found in the Wiigwaasabak to instill "Native Pride." [ citation needed ] The term itself: "Anishinaabewibii'iganan", simply means Ojibwe / Anishinaabe or " Indian " writings and can encompass a far larger meaning than only the historical pictographic script.
Cherokee, like many Native American languages, is polysynthetic, meaning that many morphemes may be linked together to form a single word, which may be of great length. Cherokee verbs must contain at a minimum a pronominal prefix , a verb root, an aspect suffix, and a modal suffix, [ 19 ] for a total of 17 verb tenses. [ 39 ]
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Indeed, computer fonts have separate coding points for each syllable (each orientation of each consonant), and the Unicode Consortium considers syllabics to be a "featural syllabary" along with such scripts as hangul, where each block represents a syllable, but consonants and vowels are indicated independently (in Cree syllabics, the consonant ...
Sequoyah (/ s ə ˈ k w ɔɪ ə / sə-QUOY-yə; Cherokee: ᏍᏏᏉᏯ, Ssiquoya, [a] or ᏎᏉᏯ, Sequoya, [b] pronounced; c. 1770 – August 1843), also known as George Gist or George Guess, was a Native American polymath and neographer of the Cherokee Nation.
Most Linux distributions support Cherokee input and display in any font containing the characters in Unicode environments. Windows 8, the first Windows release in Cherokee, contains "nearly 180,000 words and phrases" in Cherokee, and is the first Windows release in a Native American language. [46]
Gadugi (Used by the American/Canadian Blackfoot tribe, and for the language called Carrier, and used by the Native American tribe of the Cherokee and for other languages) Grecs du roi (Greek) Hanacaraka (traditional Javanese script) Japanese Gothic; Jomolhari (Tibetan script) Kiran (Devanagari) Kochi; Koren (Hebrew) Kruti Dev (Devanagari)