The kayak was first invented by the Inuit and was used by several native Arctic civilizations. The word comes from a combination of the Inuktitut word "qajaq" and the Aleut word "Iqyax."
black people
It depends on the size of the kayak.
Where did the word "season" come from?
A kayak is a self propelled water vehicle. It is similar to a canoe but is normally covered, although some open faced kayaks exist.
the root word for gift
Yes, Bruce can!
The Danish word is Kajak taken from the Greenland Eskimo 'qayaq' meaning 'small boat of skins
It is a Kayak.
Yes, the word kayak is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
Yes, kayak is a palindrome, or a word or phrase that can be read either direction. Kayak when spelled forward or backwards comes out as "kayak".
It looks like a canoe but it is actually a kayak.
the word kayak comes from Asia, North America and Gr eenlandAns 2The word 'kayak' comes from the word 'inuktitut' in the Aleut/ Inuit group of languages. It's original meaning was 'man's boat' .( I live in Canada and we often hear words in that language or encounter them in crosswords.)
The Greenland Eskimo's word for "small boat of skins", qayaq, moved over to the Danish wordkajak, which came to be an English word in 1757.
kayak
The wind blew my kayak onto the shore. Or as a verb: I went kayaking yesterday
Yak.
It is Native American
The word is "kayak."