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Haundenounee means Iroquois it another name for the Iroquois It means another name for Iroquois .
It means "great river".
The 48 degree longitude longitude line separates the U.S and Canada. So being int the "Upper 48" means your in Canada.
It means a small worthless amount. Origins somewhere in the US or Canada
Iroquois is the French Name for the Haudenosaunee ("People of the Longhouse") and are a Confederacy of currently six nations. The original Confederacy was often known as the Five Nations, and comprised the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and Seneca nations. After the Tuscarora nation joined the Confederacy in the 18th century, the Iroquois have often been known as the Six Nations by the British.
In Iroquois, kanata means village or settlement.
The word "Kanata" is an Iroquois word that means a village or small group of houses. It is the word that eventually became the name of Canada.
Being from kanata (near Ottawa), I have heard that 'kanata' is an aboiriginal word for a 'cluster of homes'. The word 'Canada' is apparently derived from 'kanata', so Canada is known as a cluster of homes.
Canada means "kanata" meaning "our village" or "village". Kanata is a Huron word
The name Canada comes from the Amerindian word Kanatha which means 'village'.
The word Canada was originally thought to have come from the Mohawk work "Kanata" which means "settlement" and was what many native groups called Canada. However there is evidence that the word may have come from Iroquoian word "Canada" which means the same thing as "Kanata"
It started with a misunderstanding between two First Nation boys and Jacques Cartier. They told him that they were leading him to their "kanata" which was their word for village. However, he mistook it as that "kanata" or Canada, as he made it out to be, was a full-fledged country. It was named in 1535. :)
The Iroquois that lived along the coasts of Canada built special canoes
The word Canada (Kanata) means village. The first explorers asked the aboriginals what the country they were in was called and the aboriginals replied with canada not knowing what the europeans meant.
"Kanata" is a Japanese word that means "far away" or "distant."
Jacques Cartier was the person who named the area "Canada", and hence his name "The Father of Canada". It was debrived from the word "kanata", in First Nation language, which means "Village"
Interesting features of Canada include that it is home to the longest street in the world and it is the second largest country by land mass. Canada gets its name from the word Kanata, which means village.