- The
Nunukul, also
spelt Noonuccal and
known also as
Moondjan are an
Aboriginal Australian people, one of
three Quandamooka peoples, who traditionally...
-
Nunukul (Nununkul, Nunugal, Nunagal), or
Munjan (Moonjan, Meanjin), is an
extinct language of
Queensland in Australia. The
people it is
spoken by are...
-
Southeastern Queensland. They are
composed of
three distinct tribes, the
Nunukul, the
Goenpul and the Ngugi, and they live
primarily on
Moreton and North...
-
members of the
Goenpul people, it has
close affinities with
Nunukul language (spoken by the
Nunukul people) and
Gowar language (spoken by the
Ngugi people)...
- Noonuccal, with
Oodgeroo meaning "paperbark tree" and
Noonuccal (also
spelt Nunukul)
being her people's name.
Noonuccal was born
Kathleen Jean Mary
Ruska on...
-
sometimes seen as
separate Durubalic languages,
especially Jandai and
Nunukul; Yagara, Yugarabul, and
Turrbul proper are more
likely to be considered...
- Island. The Ngugi, who
comprised an
estimated 100 people,
together with the
Nunukul of
North Stradbroke Island,
clashed with
whites establishing a presence...
- was also a
traditional meeting place of
Quandamooka peoples such as the
Nunukul and Goenpul. A 1964
survey found 121 pre-European
dwelling sites with evidence...
-
music director of the
Bangarra Dance Theatre. He was
descended from the
Nunukul people and the
Munaldjali clan of the
Yugambeh people of south-east Queensland...
- languages:
Durubalic Turrubal (Turubul)
Yagara (Jagara)
Jandai (Janday)
Nunukul (Nunungal, Moonjan)
Gowar (Guwar)
Dixon (2002)
considers all but Guwar...