From Algonquian, meaning red squirrel. Or more exactly, one who descends trees headlong
No. "Chipmunk" is probably an Algonquian. Means "red squirrel" or headfirst; which refers to the way a chipmunk runs down a tree.
The word "chipmunk" originates from the Ojibwe word "ajidamoo," which translates to "red squirrel." The Ojibwe language is spoken by the indigenous Ojibwe people of North America. The English word "chipmunk" is believed to have been derived from a combination of the Ojibwe word and the sound the animal makes ("chip-chip-chip").
The common name originally may have been spelled "chitmunk," from the native Odawa word jidmoonh, meaning "red squirrel". The earliest form cited in the Oxford English Dictionary is "chipmonk," however, "chipmunk" appears in several books from the 1820s and 1830s.
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The word ton came from a language called Latin
the word lingua came from Latin.
The modern word coral is derived from the Greek language word korrallion.
No
From French.
french
No.
The word "village" came into the English language from the Latin word that later became "villa." (See the Related Links below for the Online Etymology Dictionary.)