They used igloos, tupiqs and the Alaskan sod house
Inuit homes were made of snow. The Inuit shaped snow into hard blocks of ice. They made igloos out of the snow to protect themselves from the cold. Igloos were warm, small and comfortable for a temporary home.
The inuit invented dogsledding, kayaks, toggle-head harpoons with floatlines, parkas, snow goggles, fully waterproof clothing, mukluks, igloos, sleeping bags.
somebody smart answer this question please/
Their livelihood once depended on the snow and the seals, so they developed a precise vocabulary to deal with it. Knowing the difference between, say, wet snow and snow floating on water could mean life or death.
A house
Qanik refers to falling snow in Inuktitut, a language spoken by the Inuit people.
They used igloos, tupiqs and the Alaskan sod house
Inuit snow goggles are made out of leather, bones, or ivory. But newer ones are made out of wood:)
Igloo (Iglu) is probably the answer you are looking for.However, the Inuit work Iglu, does NOT refer to a house make out of snow. It can be made of anything. Wood, bricks, canvas as well as snow.It's only non Inuit's that refer to an "igloo" as a shelter made out of snow.
snow
The word "igloo" comes from the Inuit language, specifically from the Inuktitut word "iglu," which means "house" or "shelter." Igloos are traditional shelters made of snow and ice by the Inuit people, primarily found in the Arctic regions.
"Shiya" is a common Japanese girl's name that means "poetry" or "small arrow." It is a name associated with beauty, grace, and precision.
Inuit homes were made of snow. The Inuit shaped snow into hard blocks of ice. They made igloos out of the snow to protect themselves from the cold. Igloos were warm, small and comfortable for a temporary home.
The Inuit
they would burry it in the snow
the inuit live in cold places there house is made of iggloos