I am guessing no because one person didn't invent the parka the whole Inuit society did
the word anorak come from the word parka
A parka.
parka or anorak
parka
Parka
Anorak
A five letter word for a furry anorak is a parka which is a type of coat with a fur rimmed hood
Traditionally, a parka jacket would reach knee-length. These are sometimes referred to as anorak's and the garment was invented by the Caribou Inuits as a method of keeping warm.
The clothing item came from Canada and Alaska. Both anorak and parka are used somewhat interchangeably to describe items of clothing used to keep out cold, wet and wind. The former is Inuit, the latter Aleut.
A bulky, heavy jacket with a hood (often fur-lined) is a parka, also known as an anorak.
An anorak is a type of jacket (similar to a parka) from Inuit language, originally without a front opening, with a lined hood to protect the face. So, an anorak is a specific type of jacket, and retains that meaning even if extended to other types of cold- or wet- weather covering.
"A parka" and "one windbreaker" are English equivalents of the French phrase un anorak. The masculine singular word un may function as the indefinite article "a, an" or the number "one" whereas the masculine singular noun anorak references a hooded, waterproof coat. The pronunciation will be "eh-na-no-rak" in French.