2. FOOD
MEAT PIE:
Traditional Australian meat pies are the size of your hand and filled
with meat and sauce and coated in tomato sauce. Today you can find
cakes with different fillings..
3. FOOD
PAVLOVA:
It is a meringue cake covered in cream and with fruits on top. They usually
put strawberries and passion fruit.
6. “ANIMALS”
● Dingo
● Demonio de Tasmania
● Canguro
● Wallabies
● Koala
● Wombat
● Ornitorrinco
● Lobo marino Australiano
● Ave Lira de Alberto
● Equidna Australiano
7. Religion in Australia.
The 2016 census identified that 52.1% of
Australians classify themselves
Christian: 22.6% identifying themselves
as Catholic and 13.3% as Anglican.
Another 8.2% of Australians identify
themselves as followers of non-Christian
religions.
More info: Protestant 23.1% (Anglican 13.3%, Uniting Church 3.7%, Presbyterian and Reformed 2.3%, Baptist 1.5%, Pentecostal 1.1%, Lutheran
.7%, other Protestant .5%), Roman Catholic 22.6%, other Christian 4.2%, Muslim 2.6%, Buddhist 2.4%, Orthodox 2.3% (Eastern Orthodox 2.1%,
Oriental Orthodox .2%), Hindu 1.9%, other 1.3%, none 30.1%, unspecified 9.6% (2016 est.)
8. Language
Australian English
The most widely spoken language that is
recognized worldwide is Australian
English, which is made up of native
language. However, this does not mean
that there are no other languages apart
from this, much less a country as large as
Australia.
9. Language
Tasmanian Language
It was a native language of the island of
Tasmania, it has been officially extinct since
1905, leaving as vestiges several songs
recorded in a spherical cylinder.
10. Language
Languages of the straits of tower:
In the Torres Strait languages we find Meryam
Mir and Kalaw Lagaw Ya. The first is a Papuan
language, although the second is considered a
fully Australian language today. Its use extends
to the Melanesian inhabitants of the region that
gives the family its name, in the part
corresponding to the territory of Australia.
11. Language
Creoles and pidgin:
During the Cruze with Europe, the Torres Strait
Creole, the Australian Kriol, and the Pidgin
Broome Pearl Lugger appeared. The first two
are Creole languages used in Torres Strait
Creole in Queensland and in the Northern
Territory, respectively.
For its part, the latter was a pidgin used as a
lingua franca between people of different origins
that is no longer in use.