From ABC News:
Last of Original Group of Navajo Code Talkers DiesQuoteThe language he once was punished for speaking in school became Chester Nez's primary weapon in World War II.
Before hundreds of men from the Navajo Nation became Code Talkers, Nez and 28 others were recruited to develop a code based on the then-unwritten Navajo language. Locked in a room for 13 weeks, they came up with an initial glossary of more than 200 terms using Navajo words for red soil, war chief, braided hair and hummingbird, for example, and an alphabet.
FULL ARTICLE HERE (http://markholtz.info/vi)
Quote from: ZLoth on June 04, 2014, 09:57:22 PM
From ABC News:
Last of Original Group of Navajo Code Talkers DiesQuoteThe language he once was punished for speaking in school became Chester Nez's primary weapon in World War II.
Before hundreds of men from the Navajo Nation became Code Talkers, Nez and 28 others were recruited to develop a code based on the then-unwritten Navajo language. Locked in a room for 13 weeks, they came up with an initial glossary of more than 200 terms using Navajo words for red soil, war chief, braided hair and hummingbird, for example, and an alphabet.
FULL ARTICLE HERE (http://markholtz.info/vi)
I seem to recall they had no word for "torpedo" (?) and made something up like "metal fish".
Quote from: US71 on June 05, 2014, 12:20:41 AM
I seem to recall they had no word for "torpedo" (?) and made something up like "metal fish".
There were a lot of words that they had to find equivalents for. For torpedo, it was "Lo-Be-Ca", or "fish shell".