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canoe
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
canoe
I.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
dugout
▪ After organising a group of locals and a dugout canoe, we set out on the week-long journey to Iau.
▪ Using exceptionally sharp teeth, the hippos can crunch up both dugout canoes and their occupants.
■ VERB
paddle
▪ I desperately tried to paddle away but the canoe move and I was wedged in.
▪ They named it Michilimackinac, or Great Turtle, because it resembled a turtle as they paddled toward it in canoes.
▪ The hunters paddling each canoe were terrified.
▪ This time it is the author and her husband paddling an open canoe down the river for four months in 1984.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
paddle your own canoe
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A few luxuries have been smuggled in by canoe from the Solomons, which Bougainville is geographically and culturally close to.
▪ In my sixth year I did make myself a smaller canoe, but I did not try to escape in it.
▪ Memories merge with reality now as we beach the canoe near the ledges under the still-standing thick hemlock.
▪ Of course, the canoe was too heavy.
▪ They named it Michilimackinac, or Great Turtle, because it resembled a turtle as they paddled toward it in canoes.
▪ Was he drowned in an accident and his canoe washed further down to be buried in the silting up of the marshes?
▪ We maneuvered the canoe so it skirted just past that rock.
II.verb
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Hitch a ride in the van to canoe in Laguna Verde.
▪ In recent years, we have seen that technological innovation canoes forth modern values into hypermodern forms.
▪ They have climbed mountains and canoed for eight-day stretches in isolated wilderness.
▪ They will be canoeing along the Kennett and Avon canal, joining the Thames at Reading.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
canoe

canoe \ca*noe"\ (k[.a]*n[=oo]"), v. i. [imp. & p. p. Canoed (k[.a]*n[=oo]d") p. pr. & vb. n. Canoeing (k[.a]*n[=oo]"[i^]ng).] To manage a canoe, or voyage in a canoe.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
canoe

1550s, originally in a West Indian context, from Spanish canoa, a term used by Columbus, from Arawakan (Haiti) canaoua. Extended to rough-made or dugout boats generally. Early variants in English included cano, canow, canoa, etc., before spelling settled down c.1600.

canoe

1842, from canoe (n.). Related: Canoed; canoing.

Wiktionary
canoe

alt. 1 A small long and narrow boat, propelled by one or more people (depending on the size of canoe), using single-bladed paddles. The paddlers face in the direction of travel, in either a seated position, or kneeling on the bottom of the boat. Canoes are open on top, and pointed at both ends. 2 (lb en slang) An oversize, usually older, luxury car. n. 1 A small long and narrow boat, propelled by one or more people (depending on the size of canoe), using single-bladed paddles. The paddlers face in the direction of travel, in either a seated position, or kneeling on the bottom of the boat. Canoes are open on top, and pointed at both ends. 2 (lb en slang) An oversize, usually older, luxury car. vb. To ride or paddle a canoe.

WordNet
canoe
  1. n. small and light boat; pointed at both ends; propelled with a paddle

  2. v. travel by canoe; "canoe along the canal"

Wikipedia
CANoe

CANoe is a development and testing software tool from Vector Informatik GmbH. The software is primarily used by automotive manufacturers and electronic control unit (ECU) suppliers for development, analysis, simulation, testing, diagnostics and start-up of ECU networks and individual ECUs. Its widespread use and large number of supported vehicle bus systems makes it especially well suited for ECU development in conventional vehicles, as well as hybrid vehicles and electric vehicles. The simulation and testing facilities in CANoe are performed with CAPL, a very interactive scripting language.

CANoe supports CAN, LIN, FlexRay, Ethernet and MOST bus systems as well as CAN-based protocols such as J1939, CANopen, ARINC 825, ISOBUS and many more.

Canoe (disambiguation)

A canoe is a light narrow boat, pointed at both ends, propelled with a paddle.

Canoe may also refer to:

  • Kayak, referred to as canoe in the early 1900s
  • Pirogue, like a canoe but flat-bottomed and can be paddled or punted
  • Outrigger canoe, a seagoing boat with one or more outriggers
  • Waka (canoe), a type of Māori watercraft
  • Canoeing, a paddle sport

Usage examples of "canoe".

The big alligator farms pulled people in, and then they stayed and paid good tourist dollars for airboat rides, canoe treks along the endless canals at sunset, and even camping in traditional chickees.

On the second week of April, 1799, with two vessels, twenty-two Russians, and three hundred and fifty canoes of Aleut fur hunters, Baranof sailed from Prince William Sound for the southeast.

Tom had called on Andy one day, and they went out in the canoe together.

The next few days Tarzan devoted to the weaving of a barkcloth sail with which to equip the canoe, for he despaired of being able to teach the apes to wield the paddles, though he did manage to get several of them to embark in the frail craft which he and Mugambi paddled about inside the reef where the water was quite smooth.

Though his progress seemed tantalizingly slow to the ape-man whose idea of speed had been gained by such standards as the lesser apes attain, he made, as a matter of fact, almost as rapid progress as the drifting canoe that bore Rokoff on ahead of him, so that he came to the bay and within sight of the ocean just after darkness had fallen upon the same day that Jane Clayton and the Russian ended their flights from the interior.

The Tainui and Arawa canoes, from whom most of the New Zealand Maoris claim descent, were traditionally associated with Hauraki Gulf, Tainui going on to Kawhia and Arawa down the east coast.

Stack recorded a tradition of a Waitaha tribe in the South Island and said it was associated with the Arawa canoe.

September 26, steers his canoes up the shallow Assiniboine far as what is now known as Portage La Prairie, where a trail leads overland to the Saskatchewan and so down to the English traders of Hudson Bay.

Bullen first found himself in the water, then dragged from it into a canoe, and a moment later a helplessly bound captive at the mercy of an enraged foe.

It was with high hopes, but at the same time with genuine regret, that, late in May, they bade farewell to their winter home, launched a canoe, deep-laden with their accumulated stock of furs, and started southward on the swift waters of the Wisconsin.

Sevilia and his men were traveling by canoe upstream on the Nushino when, at a narrow bend in the river, they found themselves the target of dozens of Auca lances.

The men in the canoes rushed their boats toward the river-wall, and were met by another shower of cloth-yard shafts and a volley from the small balistas mounted on towers on that side of the stockade.

In the late summer of 1982, four youths and two men were on a canoeing holiday in Banff National Park when they failed to return to their base camp at the end of the day.

Four Bears stared at the big canoe and he could only believe that he was dreaming of First Man again, dreaming even though his eyes were open and cold wind was blowing his hair around his face.

Eagle Hunting camp, Four Bears stood on the riverbank and watched the white men come shoreward in their red and white canoes, and what was happening was real after all, but more exciting even than the dream of First Man.