The Powhatan people spoke Powhatan or Virginia Algonquian, an extinct language belonging to the Eastern Algonquian subgroup of the Algonquian languages.
algonquian, sioun, and the iroquain
The Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador is where the sun touches Canada for the first time every day. First to inhabit this area were the Beothuk Indians, related genetically and maybe linguistically to the Mi'kmaq Indians, who belong to the Algonquian language group. This would make them one of many Algonquian native tribes to have used canoes
The first known inhabitants of Indiana were the Paleo-Indians. Around the 1600's, the Miami Indians, a part of the Algonquian group of Indians, lived in Indiana. In the Miami tribe, women planted the fields and grew crops and men hunted for meat.
Algonquian group
There are two forms : Algonquin and Algonquian (usual form for the tribal group).
the languages they spoke i think i am not sure
There is no such thing as the Algonquian tribe. The term Algonquian applies to a very large family of distantly-related languages spoken by tribes across the entire North American continent. So, for example, the Arapaho (who spoke an Algonquian language) lived on the Great Plains and lived entirely different lifestyles to the Powhatan (another Algonquian-speaking group) who lived in the tidewater areas of Virginia.
a native american language walk
basis Eastern woodlands
Probably not, the U.S. is one of the most powerful and successful countries in the world. So no, a specific group of people cannot buy the country
The dominant group of Aztec Indians lived in Mexico