bush dassy - meaning and definition. What is bush dassy
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What (who) is bush dassy - definition

REFERS TO UNDEVELOPED RURAL AREAS (AUSTRALIAN)
The Bush (Australian); Australian bush; Austrilian bush; The Bush; New Zealand bush; Bush (New Zealand)
  • billy]], [[stockwhip]] and elastic-side boots.
  • Australian bush in [[Western Sydney]].

Bush (beer)         
BEER OF BELGIUM (WALLONIA)
User:Barbec/Bush (beer); Bush (Dubuisson)
Bush is a Belgian beer. There are a few types of Bush but the most famous is the high-fermentation amber beer with a strong taste of malt.
Bush ballad         
  • Adam Gordon
  • Banjo Paterson
  • Henry Lawson
  • First page of "The Dying Stockman," a bush ballad published in Banjo Paterson's 1905 collection ''The Old Bush Songs''
MUSIC GENRE OF AUSTRALIA
Bush poet; Bush poetry; Bush songs; Bush ballads; Bush song; Bush poem; Bush music; Bush poems; Bush balladry; Bush verse; Bush-ballad
The bush ballad, bush song or bush poem is a style of poetry and folk music that depicts the life, character and scenery of the Australian bush. The typical bush ballad employs a straightforward rhyme structure to narrate a story, often one of action and adventure, and uses language that is colourful, colloquial and idiomatically Australian.
the bush         
(in Australia and Africa) wild or uncultivated country.

Wikipedia

The bush

"The bush" is a term mostly used in the English vernacular of Australia and New Zealand where it is largely synonymous with hinterland or backwoods respectively, referring to a natural undeveloped area. The fauna and flora contained within this area may be mostly indigenous to the region, although exotic species will often also be present.

The Australian and New Zealand usage of the word "bush" for "forest" or scrubland, probably comes from the Dutch word "bos/bosch" ("forest"), used by early Dutch settlers in South Africa, where it came to signify uncultivated country among Afrikaners. Many English-speaking early European settlers to South Africa later migrated to Australia or New Zealand and brought the term with them. Today, in South Africa Fynbos tends to refer to the heath vegetation of the Western Cape and Eastern Cape.

The term is also widely used in Canada to refer to the large, forested portion of the country. The same usage applies in the US state of Alaska.