These days, Aborigines dress like Europeans. Remember that, for the most part, they are fully functional members of society, adhering to European customs.
When the first Europeans came, the Aborigines liked the colours and feel of their clothes, and were happy to adopt some of the European clothing cutsoms.
Traditional Aborigines who lived in the desert wore as little as possible, because the heat made any more clothing uncomfortable. Indigenous people of the southern states used animal skins to keep warm in winter.
a couterfeit crank looks like a tramp in robes pretanding to look homeless
it looked like a joke
a ship
Ben Hall looks like a person like every one else does!!!
No because the history would be different and it would look different. - not the questionthe question was what would Canada look like, not the history. it needs a description.
No Aborigine sailed with Flinders.
what was a normal day like for aborigines
The actors and actresses who appeared in "Quigley Down Under" (1990) are Tom Selleck, Laura San Giacomo, and Alan Rickman. Tom Selleck played the lead role of Matthew Quigley, Laura San Giacomo portrayed Crazy Cora, and Alan Rickman played the antagonist, Elliot Marston.
The feminine form of aborigine is "aborigine" as the term does not change based on gender. It is used to refer to Indigenous peoples or original inhabitants of a particular region or country.
NO
Yes.
it's a whole bunch of dots put together to make a picture of a story it's a whole bunch of dots put together to make a picture of a story
That's not a word. I'm guessing that you mean 'aborigine'? Aborigine are people who were the earliest known inhabitants of a particular area. Think of the people Columbus discovered in America. Native Americans are natives or aborigine. I've also heard this word a lot in reference to very dark-skinned Australian people. They'd be like the Native Americans of Australia.
native
Yes.
Boomerangs, spears
An Australian bushman-no.