australian

listen to the pronunciation of australian
İngilizce - Türkçe
Avustralyalı

Onun aksanından tanıdığım kadarıyla o bir Avustralyalıydı. - He was an Australian, as I knew by his accent.

Avustralyalı aktör, Andy Whitfield, vefat etti. - The Australian actor, Andy Whitfield, has passed away.

{s} Avustralya

Tom vize almak için Avustralya büyük elçiliğine gitti. - Tom went to the Australian embassy to get a visa.

Avustralya yemeklerine bayılırım. - I am fond of Australian food.

(sıfat) Avustralya
{s} Avustralya, Avustralya'ya özgü
(isim) Avustralyalı
[adj n] Avustralyalı
Avustralya kıtasına ait olan
australian english
avusturalya ingilizcesi
australian blacksnake
avustralya kara yılanı
australian capital
avustralya başkenti
australian cockroach
avustralya hamamböceği
australian coral snake
avustralya mercan yılanı
australian desert
avustralya çölü
australian dollar
avustralya doları
australian sea lion
avustralya deniz aslanı
australian terrier
avustralya teryeri
Australian Open
(Spor) Avustralya Açık Tenis Turnuyvası
australian and new zealand army corps
ve Yeni Zelanda Kolordusu Avustralya
australian englis
Avusturalya İngilizcesi
australian lift
(Tıp) işman hastaların taşınmasında kullanılan bir nakil şekli, omuzlarla yapılan taşıma
aboriginal australian
avustralya yerlisi
great australian bight
büyük Avustralya roda
royal australian navy
Kraliyet Avustralya donanmasının
wombat, australian mammal
Wombat, Avustralya memeli
American, British, Canadian, Australian Armies Standardization Program
(Askeri) Amerikan, İngiliz, Kanada, Avustralya KK Standardizasyon Programı
indo-australian plate
hint-avustralya levhası
west australian current
(Denizbilim) batı avustralya akıntısı
İngilizce - İngilizce
A person from Australia or of Australian descent
Of, from, or pertaining to Australia, the Australian people or Australian languages
Something that is Australian belongs or relates to Australia, or to its people or culture. She went solo backpacking for eight months in the Australian outback
An Australian is someone who comes from Australia. relating to Australia or its people. someone from Australia. Australian Aboriginal languages Australian Aboriginal Australian Alps Australian Capital Territory Australian National University Australian religion Australian Rules football Australian Ballet Great Australian Bight
{s} of or pertaining to Australia; of a person who comes from Australia
{i} native or resident of Australia
a native or inhabitant of Australia
the Austronesian languages spoken by Australian aborigines
of or relating to or characteristic of Australia or its inhabitants; "Australian deserts"; "Australian aborigines"
A native or an inhabitant of Australia
the Austronesian languages spoken by Australian aborigines a native or inhabitant of Australia of or relating to or characteristic of Australia or its inhabitants; "Australian deserts"; "Australian aborigines
Of or pertaining to Australia
Australian Aboriginal
The group of languages comprising several language families and isolates native to Australia and a few nearby islands, but by convention excluding Tasmania
Australian Capital Territory
Federal territory in south-eastern Australia in which the country's capital Canberra is located
Australian Cattle Dog
A breed of herding dog developed in Australia for controlling cattle. Varieties include the Queensland Heeler, Blue Heeler, and Red Heeler
Australian Cattle Dogs
plural form of Australian Cattle Dog
Australian Eastern Standard Time
The timezone used in eastern Australia of GMT+10: 00 comprised of 4 states. Queensland is the only state to remain constant through daylight savings time while the others transition to GMT+11: 00
Australian English
The form of the English language used in Australia
Australian Mist
A medium size, short-haired domestic cat breed originating in Australia
Australian Mists
plural form of Australian Mist
Australian Shepherd
A type of herding dog originating in areas around and in California
Australian Shepherds
plural form of Australian Shepherd
Australian ballot
The secret ballot system of voting in which voting is done in private on a state-issued ballot and ballots incorrectly marked set aside as invalid
Australian ballots
plural form of Australian ballot
Australian dollar
The official currency of Australia
Australian pelican
a species of pelican, Pelecanus conspicillatus, found primarily in Australia and New Guinea
Australian pelicans
plural form of Australian pelican
Australian rhyming slang
The set of slang expressions used by Australians in which a word or phrase is replaced by a rhyming word or phrase, this word or phrase then often being abbreviated to its first syllable or syllables, or its first word. Examples include bag of fruit, joe blake, and noah's ark
Australian rules
Australian rules football
Australian rules football
A variety of football, or soccer, devised in Australia
Australian Aboriginal
Any of the indigenous peoples of Australia and Tasmania that arrived 40,000-60,000 years ago. At one time there were as many as 500 language-named, territorially anchored groups (tribes) of indigenous Australians. They subsisted as hunters and gatherers. They formed groups along the male line (patrilineal descent), and their lives were centred around a watering place settled by the group's ancestors. The men were divided into lodges and were custodians of the mythology, ritual, sites, and symbols evoked in the Dreaming. The Aboriginal population, estimated to be 300,000-1,000,000 when European colonization began in the late 18th century, was devastated by introduced diseases and by the bloody 19th-century policy of "pacification by force." In 1996 they were estimated to number about 386,000. Most aspects of their traditional culture have been severely modified. All the Aboriginal peoples have had some contact with modern Australian society, and all are now Australian citizens
Australian Aboriginal languages
Group of perhaps 250 languages spoken by the one to two million native inhabitants of Australia before the beginning of European conquest in 1788. More than half are now extinct; of the remainder, only about 20, mostly in the North Territory and northern Western Australia, remain in active use by both adults and children. Most Australian languages belong to a single superfamily, Pama-Nyungan, and the remainder, a very diverse group of languages spoken in the Kimberley region of Western Australia and parts of the North Territory, may be remotely akin to Pama-Nyungan
Australian Alps
A chain of mountain ranges of southeast Australia in the southern part of the Great Dividing Range. Mount Kosciusko, rising to 2,231.4 m (7,316 ft), is the highest elevation and the tallest peak in Australia. Mountain range, southeastern Australia. The mountains form the southern end of the Great Dividing Range and the watershed between the headstreams of the Murrumbidgee River and the rivers flowing south to the Pacific Ocean. The highest peak is Mount Kosciusko. The valleys of the Australian Alps have been used for grazing, while the highlands have seen scattered mining ventures
Australian Antarctic Territory
A large section of Antarctica claimed by Australia since 1931. It extends from longitude 45° east to longitude 160° east not including Adélie Coast. The claim is disputed by the United States
Australian Ballet
Leading ballet company of Australia. It was sponsored in 1962 by art patrons interested in promoting a national ballet. Peggy van Praagh was the first artistic director (1962-74). Since 1965 the company has toured Europe and North America
Australian Capital Territory
the Australian Capital Territory an area in southeast Australia that includes the capital city Canberra and Jervis Bay. Political entity (pop., 2001: 321,680), southeastern Australia. A capital territory was mandated by the 1901 Australian constitution; the site was chosen in 1908. It lies within New South Wales and consists of Canberra and the area around Jervis Bay. Parliament moved there from Melbourne in 1927. In 1989 the Territory received responsibility for self-government similar to that held by Australian states
Australian National University
Public university in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory. Founded in 1946, it originally offered only graduate programs. Undergraduates were first admitted in 1960, and today the university offers a wide range of graduate and undergraduate programs. Affiliated with the university are research schools of medicine, physical and biological sciences, social sciences, and Pacific studies
Australian Rules football
Variety of football played between two teams of 18 players. The field is oval, 148-202 yd (135-185 m) long, with four goalposts at each end. A six-point goal is scored when the oval ball is kicked through the two central goalposts. A one-point "behind" is scored when the ball is kicked over the behind line extending between the central and outer goalposts. The game's finest spectacle is the "mark" in which competing players leap, sometimes riding on the back of an opponent, in order to catch the ball directly from the kick of another player. The player making such a catch is awarded a mark, an unhindered kick from behind the spot of the catch. The sport, Australia's foremost, was developed in Melbourne. The Victorian Football League was established in 1896 as the first professional league. It was renamed the Australian Football League in 1990 to reflect the addition of franchises outside of Victoria state
Australian and New Zealand Army Corps
armed forces from Australia and New Zealand who fought in World War I, ANZAC
Australian ballot
A printed ballot that bears the names of all candidates and the texts of propositions and is distributed to the voter at the polls and marked in secret. Also called secret ballot
Australian citizen
citizen of Australia (continent and country southeast of Asia)
Australian crawl
A crawl stroke in swimming that is executed with a flutter kick to each arm stroke
Australian religion
Religion of Australia's Aborigines, based in the Dreaming. Religion involved living in agreement with the way of life ordained in the Dreaming, through the performance of rituals and obedience to the law. Through dreams and other states of altered consciousness, the living could come into contact with the spiritual realm and gain strength from it; myths, dances, and other rituals bound the human, spiritual, and physical worlds together in a single cosmic order. A child's spirit was held to come from the dreaming to animate a fetus, and a person's spiritual heritage was more important than the bond between a physical parent and child. Sacred art included tjurunga, sand and cave paintings, and paintings on bark
Australian terrier
A small dog of a breed originally bred in Australia, having a coarse blackish coat with tan markings
australian alps
a range of mountains in Australia that forms the southern end of the Great Dividing Range
australian ballot
A system of balloting or voting in public elections, originally used in South Australia, in which there is such an arrangement for polling votes that secrecy is compulsorily maintained, and the ballot used is an official ballot printed and distributed by the government
australian blacksnake
large semiaquatic snake of Australia; black above with red belly
australian cockroach
widely distributed in warm countries
australian coral snake
small venomous but harmless snake marked with black-and-white on red
australian desert
general name given to all desert areas in Australia
australian dollar
the basic unit of money in Australia and Nauru
australian grass tree
stout Australian shrub with narrow leaves crowded at ends of branches and terminal clusters of white or pink flowers
australian hare's foot
a hare's-foot fern of the genus Davallia
australian heath
any heathlike plant of the family Epacridaceae; most are of the Australian region
australian magpie
black-and-white oscine birds that resemble magpies
australian nettle
any of several tall Australian trees of the genus Laportea
australian pea
South African evergreen partly woody vine grown for its clusters of rosy purple flowers followed by edible pods like snap beans; also grown as green manure; sometimes placed in genus Dolichos
australian pine
common Australian tree widely grown as an ornamental in tropical regions; yields heavy hard red wood
australian pitcher plant
carnivorous perennial herb having a red-brown-marked green pitcher and hinged lid both with red edges; western Australia
australian reed grass
tall Australian reedlike grass sometimes used for hay
australian sea lion
a variety of sea lion found in Australia
australian state
one of the states constituting Australia
australian sumac
evergreen of Australia yielding a dark yellow wood
australian terrier
small grayish wire-haired breed of terrier from Australia similar to the cairn
australian turtledove
small Australian dove
Australian.
Aussie

There’s not much more Aussie than a meat pie at the footy.

An Australian
Aussie
Australians
plural of Australian
Great Australian Bight
A wide bay of the Indian Ocean on the southern coast of Australia. Much of the coastline consists of high cliffs extending inland to form the Nullarbor Plain. Bay of the Indian Ocean, southern Australian coast. Its generally accepted boundaries are from Cape Pasley, Western Australia, to Cape Carnot, South Australia a distance of 720 mi (1,160 km). The head of the bight abuts on the arid Nullarbor Plain and is bounded by cliffs 200-400 ft (60-120 m) high. Near Eucla on the bight's shores is the Nuytsland Reserve. Lying in the track of the winter western winds, the bight has a reputation for storms and rough seas
great australian bight
a wide bay of the Indian Ocean in southern Australia; notorious for storms
australian

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    Aus·tral·ian

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