The word- ajéídíshjool or ajéí (in a medical setting) means "someones heart". Heart is one of the sort of words that cannot grammatically exist without it being in the possessive.
So my heart is shijéídíshjool, your heart= nijéídíshjool, his/hers/it's heart= bijéídíshjool and so on.
Just a note: like many native languages, Navajo was not a written language until contact with Europeans. This is the current agreed upon writing system . It dates from the WWIII era. But there have been others and some people may make up there own from how it sounds. The little lines above some vowels means those sounds are high tone. With no line is low tone. A mark next to a vowel with out one means it is falling or rising. Two vowels together like "oo" means it is a longer sound not a different sound like in English. The vowel sounds are a bit like spanish.
The Navajo would sleep on beds that they made. Their beds were made out of buffalo hide. This hide was more comfortable than sleeping on the ground inside their Hogans.
Historically is has also been spelled "Navaho". That is how English speakers heard it. Navajo is the Spanish derived spelling. They got it from a Tewa word meaning "fields in the river bottoms".Navajo speakers spell the Navajo Nation :" Naabeehó Bináhásdzo". In Navajo it is: Diné bikéyah or Dinétah. Dinéis the Navajo word for Navajo people.
Dine bizaad (Navajo language) for crayon is: bee 'ak'e'elchíhí The mark above some vowels makes those high tone (not stressed) The mark alone means the consonant a glottal stop like the midddle of uh'oh.
The proper adjective form for Navajo is Navajo, as in Navajo Nation, Navajo people, Navajo history, Navajo art, etc. An example sentence: We visited the Navajo display at the museum to see the Navajo jewelry.
Traditional Navajo names are completely different. You can't really translate English names to them at all. The Latin meaning of Deanna is divine or holy so it could be Diyin At'ééd, holy girl. That is not a really Navajo name though. Some traditional Navajo girl names are :Ádeezbaa'((she is going to lead a raid), Átsé Deezba (She is going first on a raid), Dlį́baa (Warrior Girl), Naazbaaa'(she went on a raid), or Asdzą́ą́łtsoii (yellow woman), and Ashiike Naakii ( the one with twin boys)
sleep mostly
drunk
YataaΕii anΓΓnΓshnΓΓ is the Navajo phrase for "good morning my husband."
aseezį́ binaaltsoos - is one way to say newspaper in Navajo. There are about three other ways too. The main Newspaper on the Navajo Nation is the Navajo Times. You can find them online and on Facebook. There is also the Navajo-Hopi Observer.
Just like everyone else they sleep in beds but back int he old days they did sleep on the floor on top of buckskins.
diyin yá naalʼaʼí-- meaning a supernatural messenger. It is not a Navajo concept. The word was made up after contact with Christians.
ííshją́ or t'áákáábaa yóónééh -- "don't forget!"
The Navajo would sleep on beds that they made. Their beds were made out of buffalo hide. This hide was more comfortable than sleeping on the ground inside their Hogans.
Sleep apnoea in British English or sleep apneaAmerican English.
to sleep=dormir to go to bed=acostarse
The opposite of sleep is awake.It is spelt as shown:A, W, A, K & E
Historically is has also been spelled "Navaho". That is how English speakers heard it. Navajo is the Spanish derived spelling. They got it from a Tewa word meaning "fields in the river bottoms".Navajo speakers spell the Navajo Nation :" Naabeehó Bináhásdzo". In Navajo it is: Diné bikéyah or Dinétah. Dinéis the Navajo word for Navajo people.