'Teepee', meaning the traditional Indian home.
tepee
No. Tipi (tepee, teepee) is a noun, a conical tent. But the noun can be used as an adjunct or adjective (tepee pole, tepee hides).
The plural of teepee (also spelt tipi or tepee) is teepees
A tipi, also called a tepee or teepee.
There are two common ways: tepee and teepee (a wigwam), but some spell checkers do not accept teepee.The spelling "tipi" is also found. All are an attempt to render a phonetic spelling of a non-English word.
A tipi, also called a tepee or teepee.
Yes . . . tipi or tepee.
There are several variants of the spoken term, including tepee, teepee, and tipi.
There is no absolute answer.The phonetic Amerindian term for the conical hide dwellings may be spelled: teepee, tipi, or tepee.
Yes, another way to spell tipi is tepee. Both spellings refer to the conical tent traditionally used by Native American tribes.
"Teepee" is an Americanization of the Native American word "tipi". I believe you could use either version in either language.
A teepee is a conical tent, made of animal skins, and wooden poles. Other names and spellings are: tipi and tepee.
That is the spelling of the slang term teepeeing (also TP-ing) meaning covering a house or tree with toilet paper (TP) as mischievous vandalism.The actual word "teepee" or "tepee" is a pole-based Amerindian hut.There is no formal verb to mean their construction.