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They would use it to lure sheeps and cows to their farm and let them eat it. This will make them breed.

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12y ago

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What would a traditional aboriginal do with a quandong?

Eat it or sell it on. It's a fruit, which also has a nut at the centre that can also be eaten. It has also been used for medicinal purposes.


What is there religion of the aboriginal tribe?

if you are talking about the Australian aboriginal tribe's it would be the dream time


What style of music is the didgeridoo?

It's an Australian Aboriginal instrument, so "Australian Aboriginal music" would be most accurate, but for the sake of a more common term: "tribal music".


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Which one?There are many different dances, for many different tribes. There are dances depicting animals, hunting, gathering, etc.Due to the varied languages among Australian Aboriginal tribes, one doubts that there would be one word that spans the entire country referring to traditional dancing as a whole.However, generally the aboriginal dance is known as a corroboree. An aboriginal coroborree is a traditional or ceremonial dance.


What kind of sounds do you have in an indigenous Australian dance?

Sounds in an indigenous Australian dance would include the didgeridoo, click-sticks and aboriginal chanting.


How do you say seasons greetings in Australian?

Australians speak english, unless of corse aboriginal. so you would say seasons greetings.


What is the Australian traditional clothing?

We really don't have traditional clothing we do use styles from the US be if we do have traditional clothes it would be denim jeans and cowboy hats


Who in the aboriginal times used the boomerang?

In Aboriginal times, the boomerang was used by Indigenous Australian cultures. It was primarily used for hunting and for sport. The boomerang was thrown to hit targets or birds in flight, and it would return to the thrower if thrown correctly.


How does aboriginal culture influence Australian Culture?

they don't. Unlike the situation between the Maury and the pakiha ( white person) in NZ I would say that aside from having seen the occasional bit of aboriginal art and a few well meaning articles in newspapers and on television 99% the Average Australians are blissfully unaware of any thing that has to do with aboriginal culture aside from a seemingly endless array of racist joke's. I agree. Having lived in Australia I can say that Aboriginal culture influences Australian culture very little. Kids in Australia are thought about Aboriginal culture throughout their schooling, which means they are somewhat well educated on the topic of Aboriginal culture. However, aside from this education, influences of Aboriginal culture can not really be seen in everyday Australian life.


What Aboriginal tribes ate damper bread?

Damper was a European invention, so traditional Aborigines did not eat damper. Aboriginal tribes would make their own breads out of seed of plants they collected, but they did not make damper from flour and water as Europeans did.


Can somebody without Aboriginal blood become an aboriginal?

The idea that someone can become an Aboriginal is a question of being accepted and identifying as something else. Someone migrating from another country to Australia becomes an 'Australian' hence they have become something else. If Aboriginal people were the ruling class Australia people would be known as 'Aboriginals' rather than Australians. It basically comes down to how open minded people are. The term Aboriginal is a blanket term and one that is used in a generalised way that imposes a stereotype that Aboriginal people are one race with one language and one set of beliefs. This is not the case. Before colonisation Australia was made up of hundreds of tribes with different languages and cultural practices. The point is that if you want to become something else you can. You may not have the same blood but that does not mean that you cannot become something else based on that fact alone. A person can become an Aboriginal without having Aboriginal blood. In a bureaucratic sense it is possible: Demonstrated by the fact that on paper an Aboriginal person can become an 'Australian'. In a more traditional sense if a person was to learn,practice, and live in a traditional manner, and be accepted, and/or identify as Aboriginal they clearly have in a sense become Aboriginal. The opposing argument in my opinion is like arguing that the royal family has a bloodline that is a higher order than that of another, and that to be a royal you must already be a royal. it is a futile argument. Bloodlines change and evolve and never stay the same forever. Their are people that identify as Aboriginal who have a small percentage of Aboriginal blood there are those who are full blood, there are those who have no Aboriginal blood In reality it is how you live, treat others, and identify as a person that defines what you are or what you become.


What is the Australian aboriginal word for love?

I remember reading this years ago in a book I found while in Australia. The word I read for love was 'Yoorana'. Although there are dozons of dialects so there are many many different words depending on who you ask.