The Latin word "saxa" is a word form meaning a large stone or rock.The Latin word "saxa" is a word form meaning a large stone or rock.The Latin word "saxa" is a word form meaning a large stone or rock.The Latin word "saxa" is a word form meaning a large stone or rock.The Latin word "saxa" is a word form meaning a large stone or rock.The Latin word "saxa" is a word form meaning a large stone or rock.The Latin word "saxa" is a word form meaning a large stone or rock.The Latin word "saxa" is a word form meaning a large stone or rock.The Latin word "saxa" is a word form meaning a large stone or rock.
From an old French word 'Palissada' meaning a stake or paling. There is an earlier Latin word 'Palus' meaning a stake
we'll VYOM is a word from Hindi origin...Meaning Space or Sky up above..
It is a Turkish word, Koshk, meaning 'open pavilion' or 'portico'. Adopted into English as the Telephone Kiosk
The word courtyard originated as a descriptive word meaning an enclosed space. Both "court" and "yard" come from the same root, meaning central part or core.
Canada. The word comes from kanata, an Iroquois word meaning village or settlement.
Canada is St. Lawrence Iroquoian word, meaning village or settlement.Please see the related link below for more information:
The word 'labrador' is a Spanish word meaning 'worker'. It is also the name of a breed of dog and of a province of Canada.
It is from an Iroquoian word meaning village or settlement
The name Canada comes from a St. Lawrence Iroquoian word, kanata, meaning "village" or "settlement".
Canada
Canada means "kanata" meaning "our village" or "village". Kanata is a Huron word
The word Canada is derived from the St. Lawrence Iroquoian word "kanata," meaning village or settlement. French explorers began using the term to refer to the area near present-day Quebec City, which eventually became the name for the country of Canada.
The name Canada comes from the Amerindian word Kanatha which means 'village'.
The name 'Canada' originated from the Huron and Iroquois word 'Kanata', meaning community, village, or settlement.
Yes, he sadly misinterpreted or misused the native Iroquois word "Kanata" (meaning village) for the entire area, so we're stuck with the adapted word "Canada".
The name "Canada" is believed to come from the Saint-Lawrence Iroquoian word "kanata," meaning "village. Legend says that when Jacques Cartier asked the name of the local place, the natives thought he meant the word for village.