Koori
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Awabakal gurri; from the region of what is today Newcastle, adopted by indigenous people of other areas.[1][2]
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
Koori (plural Kooris or Koories)
- (Australia, Australian Aboriginal, Victoria, New South Wales) An Australian aborigine, especially one from Victoria or southern New South Wales.
- 1996, Sarah Nuttall, Text, Theory, Space: Post-Colonial Representations and Identity, page 175:
- C. S. of Stawell wrote to ‘point out some facts associated with Aboriginal myths of Dreamtime’. He denied a Koori presence (‘no Aboriginals ever entered the Grampians due to evil spirits’) and repeated a dominant pioneer folk myth that the rock-art was painted by ‘a French artist who had a great appreciation of Aboriginal art of central Australia’.
- 1998, Untold Stories: Memories and Lives of Victorian Kooris, page xix,
- Stories from the Koori oral tradition show how differently the shared experience is perceived by indigenous and settler Australians.
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Usage notes
Preferred by (some of) the people themselves over the terms aborigine and aboriginal, which are considered to be culturally loaded. Other terms are used in other regions.
References
- 1990, R. M. W. Dixon, Australian Aboriginal Words, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, pages 169 and 221.
- Australian National Dictionary Centre » Australian words » Meanings and origins of Australian words and idioms » K
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