Translation: Akhbar (עכבר)
Note that this word is used both for the mammal and the computer apparatus.
'mouse' in Hebrew is ACH'BAR (spelled by the Hebrew letters A'IN - CHAF - BET - REISH, עכבר). As in English, the word is used both for the animal and for the compute's pointing device.
No.
The word for chipmunk in Russian is бурундук (burunduk).
No. "Chipmunk" is probably an Algonquian. Means "red squirrel" or headfirst; which refers to the way a chipmunk runs down a tree.
No. It is Native American
"Un tamia."
There is no Hebrew word for "an." There is no indefinite article in Hebrew.
Gilhari is the Hindi word for chipmunk.
Calalini is not a Hebrew word and has no meaning in Hebrew.
ANSWERchousenshimarisu (挑戦シマリス): Korean chipmunk (Tamias sibiricus barberi)ezoshimarisu (蝦夷シマリス): Tamias sibiricus lineatus (subspecies of Siberian chipmunk native to Hokkaido)shiberiashimarisu (シベリアシマリス): Siberian chipmunk (Tamias sibiricus)shimarisu (シマリス): chipmunktoubushimarisu (東部シマリス): eastern chipmunk (Tamias striatus)ANSWERSince the chipmunk wasn't all too well-known in Asia, they use the Katakana script to write chipmunk just like they would write any other Roman word that they themselves have no word for.Answer: In some parts of Japan, the word "Chipmunk" is spoken as "Chi - pu - mun - ku" - CHIPUMUNKU. e.g Suemunku
The word "womack" doesn't have a Hebrew definition.The word "womack" doesn't have a Hebrew word. It's a name. You can spell it ווֹמאק in Hebrew letters.
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.