I am assuming you mean the Blackfoot peoples of Alberta, Montana and Saskatchewan, not the Blackfoot Sioux who are an unrelated and distinct tribe with a different language. Even some Native Americans do not realise that there is a difference.
The Blackfoot word for the number two is natoka, pronounced nahtohka.
angel
Akai - Ref: Living With Wolves - Jim & Jamie Dutcher
Countryman is not a native American name.
Yes and No. The name is not exclusive to Native American's.
Yes
angel
Names can not be translated into any native American language.
Akai - Ref: Living With Wolves - Jim & Jamie Dutcher
THe Blackfoot word for eye is mooipssp, with the possessive plural form owapispists (his eyes).Sky is nam'ipokaiThe preposition meaning within is istsips'tsSo: nam'ipokai istsips'ts owapispists = sky within his eyes
There is no such language as "Native American". Native Americans speak more than 700 different languages.
well there are some but this is what i know.......... Blackfoot, and Blackfeet. And if you dont believe me look it up........................................................................................................................................................................................... person
Modern English names can not be translated into any native American language. If you were to meet a modern Canadian Blackfoot and told him your name is Melena, that is what he would call you - it would not be possible for him to "translate" that name into any Blackfoot word.
In Lakota, the translation for "The quiet one" is "WíyakA."
There are MANY Native American languages. Each tribe has its own language. So there is no one translation for any name or word. You would have to ask what the name is in a particular Native American language, like for instance, Cherokee, or Apache, or Cree, or Dakota, or Mohawk, or Navajo, and on and on.
There are more than 700 different Native American languages. You would need to specify which one you are talking about. Side note: the name Frank won't have a translation into any of them because its meaning doesn't have a word in any Native American language (It means "Frenchman").
The word for Little Helper in Lakota is: Cheekahla Okeecheeyah.
There are MANY Native American languages, not just one. So you would need to ask for your translation in one particular Native American language, not just in "Native American." While the above statement is very true (the US alone has 175+ recognized tribes today), Sitting Bull was of the Oglala band of the Lakota nation (Sioux); in his native language his name was Tatánka Iyótake (tatánka means 'bison').