˜yÐÄvlog

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Navajo

or ±·²¹±¹Â·²¹Â·³ó´Ç

[ nav-uh-hoh, nah-vuh- ]

noun

plural Navajos, Navajoes, (especially collectively) Navajo
  1. Also called ¶Ù¾±²Ôé. a member of the most populous nation of the southern division of Athabascan Native Americans, located in New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah, and now constituting the largest tribal group in the United States.
  2. the Athabascan language of the Navajo.


adjective

  1. Also . of, relating to, or characteristic of the Navajo, their language, or their culture:

    a Navajo blanket.

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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of Navajo1

First recorded in 1800–10; from American Spanish Apaches de Nabajú “Apaches of Nabajú†(Navajo and several Apachean languages are mutually intelligible), originally a place name applied to the Largo Canyon region of the Four Corners area of northwest New Mexico, from Tewa navahu “large arroyo with cultivated fieldsâ€; ¶Ù¾±²Ôé ( def )
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

“Everyone at the Defense Department loves Jackie Robinson, as well as the Navajo Code Talkers, the Tuskegee airmen, the Marines at Iwo Jima and so many others,†Ullyot stated.

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It was while on his way to photograph the Navajo native Americans in Arizona that he saw the "strange" and drunken sight that has been used by the Welsh rockers for their latest release.

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Navajo Olin Zhebe-Nolli is here too; he fell from a freight train as he was running away from school, running back home to Arizona.

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Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes said Tuesday afternoon that his office was monitoring “unsubstantiated†bomb threats at four locations in Navajo Nation.

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There’s the one in Gallup, N.M., perpetually packed with buses from the nearby Navajo and Zuni nations.

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