Myself, Being an Auzzie. I know that we usually have 1 or 2 showers every day.
Just about everyone here has a shower just before bed, and most have one of a morning. Before school, work or anything that opens up a brand new day.
Hope this was of some help :)
Ta guyz!
On Australia Day, many people plan a barbeque at the beach or at a park. It's a public holiday for most people, so the day is spent enjoying leisure activities.
The whole of the Australian population celebrate Australia day.
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Many Aboriginal people in Australia see Australia day as the day when their lives were turned upside down by the invasion of the English and the introduction of European diseased that decimated their tribes and family's.
none
Not a thing. There is no special recognition for people born on Australia Day.
On average, around 430 people die in Australia per day according to the latest data. This number varies based on factors such as age, health conditions, and accidents.
There are millions of people that die each year in a car accident; each day, over one hundred people die a day in a car accident in Australia and surrounding areas.
Most people bathe maybe once a day, once every other day, a couple of times a week or just take a shower. The majority of people who wash are taking more showers then baths! I mean- who bathes these days (not many people)? x
There is no Waitangi Day equivalent in Australia. The British did not negotiate any sort of treaty with the indigenous people of Australia.
Australia Day represents "Invasion Day" for the indigenous people of Australia. For them, it represents the day white man invaded their peaceful way of life and set about to destroy their culture, albeit unwittingly at first. For the Aborigines "Australia Day" means the loss of their connection to the land, their spirituality and everything that was important to them.
The Fleet which arrived in Australia on what is now celebrated as Australia Day was called the First Fleet.According to Project Gutenberg Australia, from the First Fleet between 1373 and 1483 people disembarked at Port Jackson. The figures are not exact because no complete crew musters have survived for the six transports and three storeships: thus, there may have been as many as 110 more seamen who have not been identified.