Eskimo

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A member of a group of indigenous peoples inhabiting the Arctic, from Siberia, through Alaska and Northern Canada, to Greenland, including the Inuit and Yupik.
  2. A dog of the American Eskimo breed.
  3. A dog of the Canadian Eskimo breed.
  4. A team member of the Canadian Football League's Edmonton Eskimos. (Obsolete as of 2020 with the team dropping this name in favour of Elks in 2021.)
name
  1. Any of the languages of the Eskimo people.
adj
  1. Of or relating to the Eskimo peoples.
  2. In, of, or relating to the Eskimo languages.

Pronunciation

/ˈɛs.kɪ.məʊ/ /ˈɛs.kɪ.moʊ/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-Eskimo.wav

Word forms

Eskimo Eskimos Eskimoes Eskimau Esquimau Esquimaux Esquimo more Eskimo most Eskimo

Etymology

Attested since 1584, from French Esquimau, ultimately from an Old Montagnais term. Ives Goddard's theory, accepted by most linguists today, is that it derives from Montagnais ayaškimew (“snowshoe-netter”). An older theory, defended by John Steckley due to its greater acceptance in Native oral traditions, but discredited by linguists, is that it derives from a term meaning "eater(s) of raw meat". Details * The theory most accepted among linguists today is that it derives from ayaškimew (“snowshoe-netter”) (compare Montagnais assime·w (“she laces a snowshoe”), Ojibwe ashkime (“s/he nets snowshoes”)), a term applied to the Mi'kmaq and apparently later transferred to the Labrador Inuit. * An older theory derives it from a term meaning "eaters of raw meat"; compare Cree askamiciw (“s/he eats it raw”) (Inuit are referred to in some Cree texts as askipiw, "eats something raw"). John Steckley argues in favor of this theory because of its greater acceptance in native oral traditions, and because the Huron, historical allies and trading partners of the Montagnais who loan-translated many names, also denote the Inuit using terms (e.g. Lorette Huron ok8ch iechronnon, Wyandot ok8chtronnon, both including -ok8ch- "to be raw") meaning "people of the raw", "people who eat something raw". In 1978, Montagnais-speaking Quebec anthropologist Jose Mailhot alternatively suggested Eskimo meant "people who speak a different language", but Steckley considers her theory unlikely. The term may have entered English via Spanish esquimao, esquimal (used by Basque fishermen in Labrador).

Translations

Armenian: էսկիմոս Catalan: esquimal Chinese Cantonese: 愛斯基摩人 /爱斯基摩人 Chinese Mandarin: 愛斯基摩人 /爱斯基摩人 Chinese Mandarin: 埃斯基摩人 Chinese Mandarin: 依士企摩人 Chukchi: айванаԓьын Chukchi: айван Czech: Eskymák Danish: eskimo Danish: inuit Dutch: Eskimo Finnish: eskimo French: Esquimau French: Eskimo German: Eskimo Greek: Εσκιμώος Hindi: एस्कीमो Hungarian: eszkimó Ingrian: eskimosa Irish: Eiscimeach Italian: eschimese Japanese: エスキモー Korean: 에스키모 Macedonian: Еским Macedonian: Ескимка Ojibwe: eshkimoo Ojibwe: eshkiime Polish: Eskimos Polish: Eskimoska Portuguese: esquimó Romanian: eschimos Romanian: eschimosă Russian: эскимо́с Russian: эскимо́ска Slovak: Eskimák Spanish: esquimal Swahili: Mweskimo Swahili: Waeskimo Swedish: eskimå Turkish: Eskimo Ukrainian: ескімо́с Volapük: läskioman Volapük: hiläskioman Volapük: jiläskioman Volapük: leskiman
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