canot
French
Etymology
From Middle French canot (“little boat”, also “dugout”), partly continuing (in diminutive form) Old French cane (“boat, ship”), from Middle Low German kane (“boat”), from Old Saxon *kano, from Proto-West Germanic *kanō, from Proto-Germanic *kanô (“boat, vessel”) (compare German Kahn (“boat”)); and partly from an alteration of Middle French canoe (“dugout made from the trunk of a tree”), from Spanish canoa (“dugout canoe”). More at canard.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ka.no/
Audio: (file)
Noun
canot m (plural canots)
Derived terms
- (canoe): canot-camping
- canot automobile
- canot de sauvetage
- canotable
- canotage
- canoter
Descendants
Further reading
- “canot”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Anagrams
Middle French
Etymology
First known attestation 1599, either from cane + -ot or as an alteration of canoe (modern French canoë), or a combination of both. See above.
Noun
canot m (plural canots)
- small boat made from a tree trunk