write it on your hand.
get white glasses and write his name on it
Not really. It should be: "My father's dad's name is Mark Smith."
Like thesedemi .. ديميlovato .. لوفاتو
a frag
Most non-Ojibway names are not translatable into the Ojibway language. However, many Ojibway speakers will attempt to pronounce common names into Ojibway style. Note that the Ojibway language does not contain the following consonants in the language: f, l, r, and v. Ojibway syllabics can be used to spell out the name, however the missing consontants are usually borrowed from similar languages that use syllabics (i.e. Cree).
Not until after contact with Europeans who taught Canadian Aboriginals syllabics. Syllabics were used because it made teaching and learning to read and write easier and faster.
france
In Ojibway, "welcome" is said as "boozhoo."
Ojibway Provincial Park was created in 1975.
tourountoo, it means toronto in ojibway
Anishnabeg means "original people." It is the native name of the Chippewa/Ojibway people.
The area of Ojibway Provincial Park is 26.3 square kilometers.
In Ojibway, "stah" does not have a specific meaning. Ojibway uses a syllabary rather than an alphabet, with each character representing a syllable rather than a specific letter or sound. It's important to note that Ojibway is a complex language with a different structure compared to English.
It's a place name from Longfellow's poem Hiawatha. It is apparently the Ojibway for "big water", and their name for Lake Superior.
Ojibway is not an African tribe. They are a Native American tribe predominantly located in Canada and the United States, particularly around the Great Lakes region.
it depends on what your name means. a quick search on the internet revealed(http://www.meaning-of-names.com/search/) that the name Amy means "beloved" (http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/beloved). so now we need to find the ojibway word for "beloved" which might not necessarily exist. i will check around, but i am not sure that i can find it. if you do your own research, remember that ojibway originally did not have written words. so you will probably find many spellings of the same word (example ojibway can also be spelled ojibwe). so finding the right pronounciation of that word might be hard. best is to ask an anishnabe person. though depending on which dialect of ojibway they speak, you might get variable results as well. here is a good place to start you off. http://www.native-languages.org/ojibwe.htm#language