I see myself: gadagotia
I see you: gvgohtia
I see him/her: tsigotia
I see it: tsigotia
I see you two: advgotia
I see you (plural): istvgotia
I see them (live): gatsigotia
I see them (things): detsigotia
You see me: sgigotia
You see yourself: hadagotia
you see him/her: higo(h)tia
you see it: higotia
You see another and me: sginigotia
You see others and me (us): isgigotia
You see them (living): dehigotia
you see them (living): gahigotia
you see them (things): detsigotia
He/she sees me: agigotia
he/she sees you: tsagotia
he/she sees you: atsigotia
he/she sees him/her: agotia
he/she sees himser/fherself: adagotia
He/she sees you+me: ginigotia
He/she sees you two: sdigotia
he/she sees another+me: oginigotia
He she sees us (them+me): otsigotia
he/she sees you (plural): itsigotia
he/she sees them: dagotia
You and I see him/her/it: igigotia
You and I see ourselves: edadotia
you and I see one another: denadagotia or dosdadagotia
You and I see them (living): genigotia
you and I see them (living or not): denigotia
You two see me: sgninigotia
You two see him/her/it: esdigotia
You two see yourselves: sdadagotia
You two see us (another and me): sginigotia
You two see them: desdigotia
Another and I see you: sdvgotia
Another and I see him/her: osdigotia
another and I see it: osdigotia
Another and I see you-two: sdvgotia
Another and I see ourselves: dosdadagotia
Another and I see you (plural): itsvgotia
another and I see them: dosdigotia
You (plural) see me: isgigoti
you (plural) see him/her: etsigoti
They see me: gvgigotia
They see you: getsagotia
They see him/her: anigoti
They see you and me: geginigoti
they see you two: gesdigoti
they see another and me: gegigotia or gogenigoti
they see you (plural): getsigoti
they see them: danagotia
they see themselves/one another: anadagoti
I will see: datsigoi
I saw: agigohvi
he/she will see: dvgohi
he/she saw: ugohvi
Nero wrote:Cherokee is quite interesting, but only because the verbs have so many possible forms that you need a calculator to add them up (we're talking thousands here).
This is directly copied from my "Beginning Cherokee" book (which Formiko called "the only book worth its salt").
I'll eventually get around to Cherokee. It's definately on my 'to do list!' Are you talking about Beginning Cherokee by Holmes and Sharp, Nero? (Not that I mean to steal your thread, ILuvEire!)
Nero wrote:Out of all the languages you listed, I've always thought Nahuatl to be pretty "easy". Maybe it's because I can see the similarities to Klingon . At any rate, the other ones may be just as easy (I have only ever seriously studied Lakota, so I wouldn't know )
The very same!
johnH wrote:‹(O.o)› Well okay teach me. Teach me, but any native american language will do as long as it results, in being able to speak to native americans in their native tong.
‹·—·› I haven't begun any so… really start with any. by the way theirs this one with a-lot of nasal sounds and what seams like a really complex grammar·, which ever languages… are described perfectly by that begin with those.
‹·—·› Suggestion would be to look at my profile .(·—·)› because those are the languages I already decided to like. Let’s start with Inuktitut, then go from there.
johnH wrote:Thanks a-lot By the way I like your name how do you ah pronounce it?,
((I simply looked up a code chart not good for accurate pronounciation,
is pronounced (wajawaja) ))
Return to “North American Indigenous Languages”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 11 guests