brush kangaroo - meaning and definition. What is brush kangaroo
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What (who) is brush kangaroo - definition

DEVICE FITTED TO THE FRONT OF A VEHICLE TO PROTECT IT AND ITS PASSENGERS FROM DAMAGE IN A COLLISION WITH AN ANIMAL
Bull bars; Roo bars; Roo bar; Kangaroo bar; Bull bar; Brush guard; Push bumper; Brush bar
  • Push bar of a police car in Abu Dhabi, used to move stranded vehicles out of the way
  • semi tractor]]

Boxing kangaroo         
  • Boxing Kangaroo flag, design used in 1983
  • Kangaroo Boxing sideshow poster from 1890s printed by [[Adolph Friedländer]]
NATIONAL SYMBOL OF AUSTRALIA
Kangaroo boxing; Boxing Kangaroo
The boxing kangaroo is a national symbol of Australia, frequently seen in pop culture. The symbol is often displayed prominently by Australian spectators at sporting events, such as at cricket, tennis, basketball and football matches, and at the Commonwealth and Olympic Games.
Stephen G. Brush         
AMERICAN PHYSICIST
Stephen Brush
Stephen George Brush (born February 12, 1935) is a scholar in the field of history of science whose career spanned the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. His research resulted in hundreds of journal articles and over a dozen books.
Brush Motor Car Company         
  • Brush Runabout Company factory at 12568 Oakland Ave, Highland Park, MI 48203
COMPANY
Brush car; Brush Motor Car; Alanson Partridge Brush; Brush Runabout
Brush Motor Car Company (1907-1909), later the Brush Runabout Company (1909-1913), was based in Highland Park, Michigan.

Wikipedia

Bullbar

A bullbar or push bumper (also (kanga)roo bar, winch bar or nudge bar in Australia, livestock stop (initially a term used to refer to locomotive pilots) or kangaroo device in Russia, and push bar, ram bar, brush guard, grille guard, cactus pusher, rammer, PIT bar, PIT bumper, or cattle pusher in the United States and Canada) is a device installed on the front of a vehicle to protect its front from collisions, whether an accidental collision with a large animal in rural roads, or an intentional collision by police with another vehicle. They range considerably in size and form, and are normally composed of welded steel or aluminium tubing, or, more recently, moulded polycarbonate and polyethylene materials. The "bull" in the name refers to cattle, which in rural areas sometimes roam onto rural roads and highways.