Manitou
//ˈmanɪtuː//
Translations of "manitou" (14 languages)
| Language | Translation | Romanization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cree | ᒪᓂᑐᐤ(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | manitow | |
| Czech | Manitou(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — | |
| Fox | manetôwa(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — | |
| German | Manitu(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — | |
| Japanese | マニトゥ(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | manitu | |
| Lakota | Wakȟáŋ Tȟáŋka(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — | |
| Mi'kmaq | mntu(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — | |
| Mohawk | orę́·naʔ(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — | |
| Mohegan-Pequot | manto(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — | |
| Ojibwe | manidoo(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — | |
| Portuguese | manitu(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians), manitó(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — | |
| Russian | маниту(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | manitu | |
| Turkish | manitu(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — | |
| Unami | manëtu(A god or spirit as the object of religious awe or ritual among some American Indians) | — |
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.