navajo |
|
ute |
navajo |
As nouns the difference between ute and navajo
is that
ute is a small vehicle based on the same platform as a family car but with a unibody construction and a built-in open tray area for carrying goods; similar but not identical to a pick-up truck while
Navajo is a member of the Navajo people, currently the largest Native American tribe in North America.
As proper nouns the difference between ute and navajo
is that
ute is a Native American people of Utah, Colorado and New Mexico while
Navajo is an Apachean (Southern Athabaskan) language of the Athabascan language family belonging to the Na-Dené phylum. It is spoken by 149,000 people in the American Southwest (Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, and Colorado).
navajo |
duoplural |
As nouns the difference between navajo and duoplural
is that
navajo is the navajo language while
duoplural is (linguistics|grammar) duoplural number; the grammatical number of a noun marking two or more of something (as in singular or duoplural) some languages that employ the
duoplural are navajo and taos, where the verb shows singular, dual, and plural numbers, but the nouns are marked only as singular or nonsingular (duoplural).
As an adjective duoplural is
(grammar) pertaining to grammatical number (as in singular and plural), referring to two or more of something; nonsingular.