Respuesta :
I think the answer is "Even now when they see the storm clouds gathering, the Kiowas know what it is: that a strange wild animal roams on the sky. ...But they speak to it, say "Pass over me." They are not afraid of Man-Ka-ih, for it understands their language."
The quote that best supports the analysis of the Kiowa's belief in the power of language stated in the article by McNamara, is Even now when they see the storm clouds gathering, the Kiowas know what it is: that a strange wild animal roams on the sky...But they speak to it, say "Pass over me." They are not afraid of Man-Ka-ih, fot it understands their language."
The oral tradition is very powerful for the Kiowa people, and it is transmitted by means of language, a language that nobody has been able to classify. Aho has told him stories about the Kiowas journey from Montana down to the southern plains, stories that are very vivid in his memory. Aho, his grandmother, was a living history. This is very important because of how powerful language and oral tradition are for the Kiowa's culture. In this passage, they can understand nature's language and also act on nature through language.