The earliest historical records for Britain include mention of foxes so it seems reasonable to assume that they are as native to Britain as any species that lives on the island. If humas can swim the English Channel, it is reasonable to suppose that foxes could as well so even if they didn't start out in Britain, they could have arrived there in times so far prehistoric as to render the question about them being "native" pretty meaningless.
NO
Yes.
Britain supported Native Americans because the majority of their population supported the British.
There is no Hawaiian word for fox. No mammals are native to Hawaii.
There is no native Hawaiian word for fox or any other mammal.
A California Channel Island fox is another name for the Channel Island fox, a species of fox native to the California Channel Islands, Latin name Urocyon littoralis. Each of the six Channel Islands has its own native fox subspecies.
Yes, the gray fox occurs in North Carolina.
a BRITON was a native of the land of Britain.
Missouri Fox Trotter
the desert fox eats papyrus and it is native to Egypt
the native preditors of a rabbit can be a fox, hawk, owl, weasle or stoat
Britain won allies among Native Americans when they supported them. Britain would bring items to trade that the natives wanted for example.
In Britain, the animal that is the main predator of sheep is the red fox. Fox hunts are very organized events in Britain.