"well becuase there was a queen backk in the england in thee olden days i should put it, and how to say stinky or smelly i should say, is skunk in england." "So they called her smelly from that day on and the skunk got its name from her."
and , "that is how the skunk got its name." good story , yes yes it is
The word skunk is a coined wordof Algonquian origin.
(O-ch-ky)
tribe. Meaning
the white striped cat.
From the Algonquian language 'squunck'
skunk/ shtant
skunk = la mofeta
The Spanish word for "squirrel" is "ardilla".
Skunk has only one syllable, so it would just be "skunk".
The word skunk has only one syllable.
Yes, the word 'skunk' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of mammal, a word for a thing.
The word "skunk" is both a noun and a verb.The noun "skunk" is a word for a type of mammal with a capability of spraying malodorous effluvia when annoyed; a word for a thing.The verb "skunk" means to have been sprayed by a such an animal; to to prevent an opponent from scoring or succeeding; to defeat completely; a word for an action.
mouffette
it is clipped
"Mephitis mephitis"
The rhyming word pair of beds of smelly animals could be: skunk's bunks.
In Irish: scúnc (animal); suarachán or bréantachán (a person). In Scottish Gaelic: ?
el zorrillo