Eora people speak English.Historically, they spoke Darug, also called Sydney Language. Darug went extinct in the early 20th Century.
i love me cos i am so cool and your not
EoraPeople of the region in the area of present-day Sydney, along the harbour foreshores and the area between Port Jackson and Botany Bay. The language that they spoke was a dialect of Darug. Neighbours to the Darug, Kuring-gai, and Tharawal peoples. I found this information on http://www.lib.mq.edu.au/all/journeys/related/tribes.html
The Eora tribe occupied the present Sydney harbour foreshores and the Port Jackson and Botany Bay . The adjacent peoples were the Darug, Kuring-gai and Tharawal.
Parramatta is an aboriginal word meaning "place where eels lie down".
Waiali, Wali : Brushtail Possum in the Darug dialect (local to the Sydney area) found on http://www.thehills.nsw.gov.au/IgnitionSuite/uploads/docs/Traditional%20Aboriginal%20Names%20BH%20Shire(1).pdf
The resistance started just after the British arrived in 1788. It escalated in 1790, when Pemulwuy (leader of the resistance) and 4 other Aboriginal tribesmen speared Governor Philip's gamekeeper John McIntyre, who is believed to have killed Aboriginal people, and subsequently McIntyre died.
if you are referring to the surname of Ginn - in Australia, this name can come from native aboriginal darug tribes. 'ginn' came from the aborginal word for woman but the whites turned it into being quite degoratory in nature. It is pronounced with a hard G. it actually comes from a particular tribe of about 1500 people in the south sydney to marickville area that were all but wiped out by smallpox. if you have no possible ties to aboriginality then it is also welsh & french derived & stems from a word that translate to being 'of skill, ability' roll them together and you have a 'skillful woman' lol - that's a joke
Botany Bay was home to the local indigenous people, but Botany Bay is not actually where the First Fleet stayed. the Fleet moved north to Port Jackson, home of the Gadigal (sometimes called Cadigal) tribe; the British used the term Eora to refer to the people in this area; Eora describes a language group. Other Aboriginal clans included the Gadigal, Wangal, Wallumedegal, Boromedegal, Gamaragal, Borogegal, Birrabirragal and Gayamaygal. Common languages were Darug, Dharawal and Guringai. It is believed that following European arrival the Cadigals died out within a couple of years following British occupation owing to disease, environmental damage and other factors.
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
you mean what you mean
Mean is the average.