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[personal profile] calzephyr
Waddy - noun.

Waddies, also called a nulla-nulla or boondi, is a heavy and pointed club traditionally used as a weapon, for hunting or as a tool by Indigenous Australian people.


Arrernte Keulen EthnM.jpg
By User:FA2010 - Own work, Public Domain, Link


[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Puquios - noun.

In this high-tech world, it's easy to forget that people have always had high-tech solutions to their problems, even if they seem low-tech today. And, you have to admit, poquios are also an artistic solution. The word stems from the Quechua word, pukyu, which means spring, water well, or source. The poquios is an ancient below-ground aqueduct system which allows the movement of water over long distances without much evaporation loss. They're often found in Chile and Peru and the link below will tell you more about how their mystery was uncovered.

https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-ancient-peruvian-mystery-solved-from-space


02-Aqueductos de Cantalloc-nX-32.jpg
By PsamatheM - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, Link




Note: I didn't see a tag for ancient Peruvians, so I chose aboriginal and Indigenous people in the meantime.
[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Nîcîwâkan - noun.

Nîcîwâkan is a Cree word for friend.

To hear the pronunciation along with four other Cree words, watch the video below!



[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Apiscacihkosos - noun.

Apiscacihkos is Cree (Saulteau First Nation) for pronghorn, also known as the prairie unicorn. Click here for a pronunciation: https://www.firstvoices.com/explore/FV/sections/Data/Plains%20Cree%20(Y)/Cree/Cree%20(Saulteau%20First%20Nation)/learn/words/22ff008c-67c6-4bb1-b1b3-a455cf45cf0f

First Voices is an amazing resource for exploring other First Nations words in over a dozen languages!


Antilocapra americana.jpg
By www.naturespicsonline.com - http://www.naturespicsonline.com/, Copyrighted free use, Link


[identity profile] theidolhands.livejournal.com
bun·yip [ˈbuhn-ˈyip]:
origin: [1850] Wemba-Wemba language bunyip= "evil spirit" or "devil"

noun
Myth or cryptid? The mystery remains. This creature is also called a "kianpraty". The big foot of the swamp, a creature with various appearances on record, but usually something close to a gorilla mixed with a dog or bear; nocturnal, preys on livestock & humans by lurking at the water's edge like an alligator.

Heavily reported in the past, particularly in Australia, and said to let out a cry before beginning its hunt that scared aborigines away on such nights. Some wonder if it may be a real life creature such as a hippopotamus, walrus, seals, manatee, etc. that was lesser known then and mistaken for some frightening beast. However, that wouldn't account for many reports of it raising on hind legs reaching 10-13 feet.

Interestingly enough, some fossilized bones were found by George Rankin in the Wellington Caves, and it was not any currently known animals. The natives said that the now-labeled Diprodoton -- see image below -- was a "bunyip"; an animal thought to be long extinct, somewhat resembling a rhino or primitive bear (as it's commonly described as hairy). It's been said that the sound aborigines heard was a koala cry, which is what the prehistoric Diprodoton coincidentally resembles.

Bunyip can also mean impostor, or something pretending to be something it isn't -- coined in 1890 by the upper class to describe Australians striving to rise into their aristocracy.


adjective
Something that is a forgery or fake, like a "bunyip document".



Looks like a giant koala bear to me.


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