Well, it's funny that you should ask this. Of course the Northern Inuit supporters will tell you that it is Canis familiaris, that is if they are intelligent enough to even know this nomenclature. But what they're hiding is the fact that their "dogoid" is actually Canis familiaris x Canis lupus,in other words, a wolf hybrid of varying percentages.
Alaska/ Northern Canada
true
In Inuit, the word "Inuit" means "the people." It is the plural form of "Inuk," which means "person."
In the far North, it is mostly Inuit if you go down south there are different tribes besides Inuit
Most Inuits get their dogs from breeders, or buy a female and breed it themselves to save money This is a totally bogus answer written by someone who knows NOTHING about Inuit, the north or their dogs! First of all, there is NO SUCH WORD AS "INUITS"! The word "Inuit" is already plural. "Inuk" is singular. Inuit have had Inuit Dogs for thousands of years. The breed, although in low numbers, exists in many communities of the circumpolar north as part of traditional working dog teams. Team owners are willing to share their dogs genetic material with other serious dog team owners.
The Inuit people are located in the Arctic part of the world, in some of the most northern parts. The Arctic Coast, which is where most of the Inuit have their home, stretches from eastern Greenland to the Aleutian Islands
Cold, they usualy live in northern canada.
The Inuit people of the most northern parts of North America.
Most Inuit people live in ordinary wooden-frame housing or prefabricated housing. (As a note, "Inuit" and "Indian" are mutually-exclusive terms, as Inuit refers to the northern Aboriginal groups, while Indian refers to all aboriginal groups that are neither Inuit or Metis.)
The Inuit people typically live in Northern Canada so earthquakes are more likely to occur in their areas of residence rather than tornadoes.
Approximately 25,000 Inuit people ( 1/2 of the total Canadian Inuit ) live in Nunavut Territory. This is directly north of Manitoba and extends north to numerous Arctic islands. The largest city is Iqaluit on Baffin Island, a centre of about 7,000 people, mostly Inuit.
its easy,the inuit