No. Australia was settled differently from North America, being a purely penal colony from the beginning, and did not experience the same conditions.
The old harvest festivals of England were not carried over, as they were not relevant to Australian conditions. The only "Thanksgiving" commemorations (such as "Harvest Thanksgiving") were purely religious, and brought over with other cultures much later, such as the Germans.
Thanksgiving is not celebrated in Australia.
Thanksgiving is not celebrated in Australia, but it is pronounced exactly as it looks - "thanksgiving".
Australia does not have a Thanksgiving day.
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No. Thanksgiving is a US holiday. It is not relevant to Australian history or culture.
Thanksgiving is a harvest holiday celebrated primarily in the United States and Canada. Countries such as Australia, New Zealand and the UK do not have that particular Thanksgiving festival.
Australians don't celebrate Thanksgiving in the same sense as Americans. They have a national day of Thanks, in which you thank others and God for that which you are, well, thankful for. However, Australia is a country founded to house convicts. They never had to survive a harsh winter (even in the south the winter is still quite warm compared to Mass.) and they never held a speific religious convition to forming their own country - it was simply easier to stay there after they had finished their term of punishment. Thus, they don't celebrate Thanksgiving in way that one would suspect.
They don't. It's an American holiday.
All floats are custom-made in the Macy's Parade Studio. The parade does not accept applications for floats.
We vote you fools!
Not much. Probably Australia day.
Australians are not children. They don't have rubbish like that.