Bushrangers were literally a law unto themselves. Whilst they could be banned in word alone, they could not physically be banned from anywhere. If they wished to enter a shop, they entered it - and no-one would dare to oppose them.
Absolutely. Bushrangers posed a genuine threat, and many could be ruthless.
123 aprox
Tourists are banned from Coffee Shops in Amsterdam when they are minors or if they are causing a disturbance by being a public nuisance.
yes
There was no leader of the bushrangers. Bushrangers operated in small gangs, or occasionally alone, and they formed one of the hazards of life in rural Australia for many decades. Therefore, there could be no single leader.
bushrangers
there were more than 4
A gang of bushrangers, like "Ned Kelly's gang."A collective noun is a word for a group of people or things. I don't believe that bushrangers, loners at heart, get together often enough for a collective noun to become theirs. You have to use a general collective noun used for people based on their situation or activity, including group to start you off; a troop of bushrangers, a crowd of bushrangers, a mob of bushrangers, a boatload of bushrangers, a convention of bushrangers, a meeting of bushranges, a party of bushrangers, or a pair of bushrangers.
Bushrangers mainly used horses.
well you wood have to brake the law
Murray Bushrangers was created in 1993.
Bushrangers primarily used horses for transportation.