A balladist is a person who composes or performs ballads.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern ---L-DIS-. That is, nine letter words with 4th letter L and 6th letter D and 7th letter I and 8th letter S. In alphabetical order, they are: balladist
The current polymer Australian Ten Dollar note has Andrew Barton (Banjo) Paterson (balladist & journalist) on the front and Dame Mary Gilmore (poet & human rights campaigner) on the back. The $10 note only has the words "Waltzing Matilda" on it. The text along the bottom of the note are excerpts from "The Man From Snowy River". "Waltzing Matilda" and "The Man From Snowy River" are both the work of Banjo Paterson.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 4 words with the pattern BAL-----T. That is, nine letter words with 1st letter B and 2nd letter A and 3rd letter L and 9th letter T. In alphabetical order, they are: baldicoot balladist ballpoint ballsiest
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 10 words with the pattern B-L--D---. That is, nine letter words with 1st letter B and 3rd letter L and 6th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are: balladeer balladine ballading balladins balladist belauding belvedere bilanders bulwaddee bylanders
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 6 words with the pattern BA-L-D---. That is, nine letter words with 1st letter B and 2nd letter A and 4th letter L and 6th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are: balladeer balladine ballading balladins balladist barleducs
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 9 words with the pattern B--L----T. That is, nine letter words with 1st letter B and 4th letter L and 9th letter T. In alphabetical order, they are: balladist ballpoint ballsiest baulkiest biblicist bieldiest biologist brilliant bullfight
Australia puts famous or historically significant Australian identities on its banknotes. The current polymer Australian Ten Dollar note has Andrew Barton (Banjo) Patterson (balladist & journalist) on the front and Dame Mary Gilmore (poet & human rights campaigner) on the back. Banjo Paterson wrote some of Australia's best known poems including "Waltzing Matilda", "The Man From Snowy River" and "Clancy of the Overflow". He was a war correspondent during the Boer War and others, an ambulance driver during WW1 and later served as an officer in the front lines in France where he was wounded.
Australia puts famous or historically significant Australian identities on its banknotes. The original paper Australian Ten Dollar note first issued in 1966, had Francis Howard Greenaway (convict architect) on the front and Henry Lawson (Short story writer & poet) on the back. The 1988 trial of the polymer note was a commemorative for Australia's Bicentenary and had a scene of the HMS Supply landing in Sydney Cove on the front and Aboriginal art on the back. The current polymer Australian Ten Dollar note first issued in 1993, has Andrew Barton (Banjo) Patterson (balladist & journalist) on the front and Dame Mary Gilmore (poet & human rights campaigner) on the back.
Australia puts famous or historically significant Australian identities on its banknotes. The current polymer Australian Ten Dollar note has Andrew Barton (Banjo) Patterson (balladist & journalist) on the front and Dame Mary Gilmore (poet & human rights campaigner) on the back. Banjo Paterson wrote some of Australia's best known poems including "Waltzing Matilda", "The Man From Snowy River" and "Clancy of the Overflow". He was a war correspondent during the Boer War and others, an ambulance driver during WW1 and later served as an officer in the front lines in France where he was wounded.
Australia puts famous or historically significant Australian identities on its banknotes. Despite her not so brilliant arrival in Australia as a convicted horse thief in 1792, she redeemed herself and married businessman Thomas Reibey. By the time Thomas died, the family business consisted of farms and various trading enterprises. Mary assumed full responsibility for her late husbands business. She managed the businesses extremely well and expanded her shipping interests and opened new warehouses. What she would have been known for is her extensive charitable works, and her interest in the church and education. She was a well known and highly respected colonial philanthropist.
Queen Elizabeth II is on the obverse of all Australian coins. The original paper Five Dollar note released between 1967 and 1991, had Sir Joseph Banks (Botanist) on the front, and Caroline Chisholm (Philanthropist) on the back. The first polymer Five Dollar note released between 1992 and 1997, and from 2002 onwards, had Queen Elizabeth the Second on the front, and a design showing the new and old Parliament Houses in Canberra, ACT on the back. The second polymer Five Dollar note released as a Commemoration of Federation in 2001, had Sir Henry Parkes (politician) on the front, and Catherine Helen Spence (Writer and Suffragette) on the back. The current polymer Australian Ten Dollar note has Andrew Barton (Banjo) Paterson (balladist & journalist) on the front and Dame Mary Gilmore (poet & human rights campaigner) on the back. The current polymer Australian Twenty Dollar note has Mary Reibey (ex-convict & pioneer business woman) on the front and Rev John Flynn (pioneer of world's first aerial medical service) is on the reverse. The new polymer Fifty Dollar note released from 1995 onwards, has David Unaipon (Inventor, preacher & author) on the front, and Dame Edith Cowan (Social worker, politician & feminist) on the back. The new polymer One Hundred Dollar note released from 1996 onwards, has Dame Nellie Melba (Opera singer) on the front, and Sir John Monash (WW1 General) on the back.
A B "Banjo" Paterson (journalist, author and balladist) Henry Lawson (poet and writer) Ned Kelly (bushranger) Kylie and Dannii Minogue (entertainers) Dame Nellie Melba (operatic soprano) Charles Kingsford-Smith (aviation pioneer) Reverend John Flynn (founder of the Flying Doctor service) Paul Hogan (actor) Mark Occhilupo (world surfing champion) Sir Robert Menzies (longest serving Prime Minister) Yvonne Goolagong (Cawley) (tennis player) Lionel Rose (world boxing champion) Herb Elliot (olympic runner and first to break the 4 minute mile) Rod Laver (tennis player) John Newcombe (tennis player) Cathy Freeman (olympic runner) Dawn Fraser (olympic swimmer) Barry Humphries (entertainer) Ian Thorpe (olympic swimmer) Colleen McCullough (author of the Thorn Birds) Dame Mary Durack (author and historian) Greg Norman (golfer) Elle Macpherson (super model) Megan Gale (model and actress) Mary Donaldson (Crown Princess Mary of Denmark) Sir Edward "Weary" Dunlop (surgeon and POW hero) Slim Dusty (country singer and songwriter) Sir Donald Bradman (cricketer) Errol Flynn (actor) Chips Rafferty (actor) Bryan Brown (actor) Howard Florey (pharmacologist and developer of penicillin)