kayak
The inuit traditionally used two types of boats, the Kayak and the Umiak.
Kayak
A Sally Boat is a small narrow boat used in canals. Mostly used in Europe.
No, "narrow" is not a noun. It is an adjective used to describe something that has a small width in comparison to its length.
A umiak, which is a wood frame hide covered boat used by Eskimos.
canoe barge smack (fishing boat) scull (narrow racing boat with 1,2, or 4 rowers) ferry yacht shell (narrow rasing bjat with as many as 8 people rowing) skiff (type of row boat) kayak (another type of row boat) umiak (Row boat used in the arctic)
The homophone of "skull" is "scull," which refers to a narrow, light racing boat used in rowing.
The type of homes that the Inuit people built depended on the kinds of materials they could find., the kind of weather they had to shelter from and how often they moved from place to place. Different Inuit groups had different kinds of shelters. Igloo's were temporary shelters while other winter houses were built with stones and covered with sod. The coastal Inuit sometimes built larger homes that were partly dug into the ground and covered by seal skin or sod roofs.
A long narrow boat that is often used on Venetian canals. Powered by a person pushing on the sea floor.
Yes, mostly on their faces because there bodies are always bundled in warm clothing making those covered bodily areas used to such a warm temperature.
None of these alternatives really describes an obelisk. It can be described as a narrow, tapering four sided column topped by a pyramid. Many of them are covered in writing.