inuit

listen to the pronunciation of inuit
Englisch - Türkisch
(Sosyoloji, Toplumbilim) Kanadanın buzullarında yaşayan bizim eskimo diye bildiğimiz insanların halkına verilen isim
Eskimo
Türkisch - Türkisch
Eskimoların kendilerine verdiği ad
Englisch - Englisch
the members of an indigenous people of northern Canada and parts of Greenland and Alaska
the Eskimo-Aleut language of the Inuit
The term Inuit has official status in Canada, and is also used elsewhere as a synonym for Eskimo in general. However, this latter use, in including people from Siberia who are not Inupiaq-speakers, is, strictly speaking, not accurate
Inuit, plural of inuk 'person'
"the people" in Inuktitut
Aboriginal peoples who reside in the eastern arctic and Arctic Ocean regions of the North West Territories, formerly known as Eskimo Inuit do not have legal Indian status under the Indian Act but a 1939 Supreme Court of Canada decision determined that Inuit are entitled to the same programs and services (funding) as provided to Indians
a member of a people inhabiting the Arctic (northern Canada or Greenland or Alaska or eastern Siberia); the Algonquians called them Eskimo (`eaters of raw flesh') but they call themselves the Inuit (`the people')
are Aboriginal peoples of Canada that have traditionally used and occupied, and currently use and occupy, the lands and waters of the area ranging from the Yukon and Northwest Territories to northern Quebec and Labrador They are sometimes refereed to as 'Eskimo', which is considered a derogatory term by the Inuit themselves Politically, the Inuit were never included in the Indian Act, but became a federal responsibility in 1939 In 1972, the Inuit Tapirisat of Canada (ITC) was established to preserve their culture
aboriginal people in northern Canada who live above the tree line in the Northwest Territories, Northern Quebec and Labrador
A people who live in the north of Canada and Greenland Traditionally, they live from animals and fish When there is only one person, she or he is called an Inuk
Aboriginal people in northern Canada living generally above the tree line in the Northwest Territories, northern Quebec and Labrador The Inuit are not covered by the Indian Act but the federal government makes laws concerning the Inuit According to the 1996 Canada Census there were 1,105 individuals who identified themselves as Inuit living in Alberta (Source: Department of Indian and Northern Affairs Canada )
An Aboriginal people in northern Canada, who live above the tree line in the Northwest Territories, and in Northern Quebec and Labrador The word means "people" in the Inuit language - Inuktitut The singular of Inuit is Inuk
Literally, ‘the people’ the name given by the Arctic people to themselves
Aboriginal people in northern Canada, living above the tree line in the Northwest Territories, Nunavut, northern Quebec and Labrador The Indian Act does not cover the Inuit people but the federal government makes laws concerning them
Any of several Aboriginal peoples of coastal Arctic Canada, Alaska, and Greenland
Inuktitut, the Inuit language
plural form of Inuk Individual members of the Inuit peoples
Of or pertaining to Inuit people, language, or culture
{i} member of the people who inhabit Arctic regions of North America and Greenland (called Eskimo in Algonquian)
{i} native people who inhabit Arctic regions of North America and Greenland (called Eskimo by the Algonquians); any of several dialects used by the Inuit
The Inuit are a race of people descended from the original people of Eastern Canada and Greenland. relating to the Inuit
plural of Inuk
inuit
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