there are about 6000 inuit members living today.But if im wrong.send me an emall at bam61989@Yahoo.com
yes
Inuit is a indian tribe.
In the language of the Inuit people, "Inuit" means "the people". The language developed over 5,000 years.AnswerThe meaning of Inuit is "the people" coming from the Inuktitut language.
Inuit is not a tribe, it is a race of people who are pathetically stereotyped. But yes, they hunt and fish everynow and then.
Inuit are the peoples who live in and around the Arctic. From the tip of Russia to the east of Greenland, the Inuit refers to the people formerly called the "eskimo" The term "eskimo" comes from a Native American word that could have meant "eater of raw flesh" and is now considered derogatory by many of the people. The people prefer the name Inuit which means "THE PEOPLE" or "THE REAL PEOPLE". The word comes from a language called Inuit-Inupiaq. When speaking of a singular person one should use the term Inuk or "person" The tribe is all Inuit but can be designated by the area they come from, such as the Mittimatalik Inuit of Baffin island or the Northwest territories Inuit.
Inuit people don't have a reserve. The tribe declared independence from Canada.
The Inuit tribe in Alaska...
No, Inuit is the name of a group of indigenous people across Russia, Alaska, Canada, and Greenland.
Well the Inuit people evolved over time, they had no written records of their people.
An Inuit is not the same tribe as Chippewa. Inuit's are found in arctic parts of the United States, Canada, and Greenland, and are also referred to as Eskimos.
Population of Inuit tribe is ca. 118,000 people.
The mothering.