birding-aus

Re: Subject: [Birding-Aus] Re 'Jabiru'

To: <>, Birding Aus <>
Subject: Re: Subject: [Birding-Aus] Re 'Jabiru'
From: Denise Goodfellow <>
Date: Tue, 24 Nov 2009 16:00:31 +0930
David
The mind boggles!
Regards
Denise


on 24/11/09 3:34 PM,  at
 wrote:

> Denise
>
> The eastern Kulin names are from Barry Blake's Woiwurrung language paper in
> the Handbook of Australian Languages vol 4.
>
> Bath-mum is another variation of dirty bum.  Note the connection between
> mum (or moom as it's pronounced) and our Moomba festival.
>
> Regards
>
> David
>
>
>
>
>
>              Denise Goodfellow
>              <
>              nd.com.au>                                                 To
>                                        <>,
>              24/11/09 04:20 PM         Birding Aus
>                                        <>
>                                                                         cc
>
>                                                                    Subject
>                                        Re: Subject: [Birding-Aus] Re
>                                        'Jabiru'
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> I love the name - bik-mum.  Where did you dig this up?
> Denise
>
>
> on 24/11/09 2:37 PM,  at
>  wrote:
>
>> Denise
>>
>> The demise of Victorian Magpie Geese or Bik-mum (dirty bum) was down to
>> Europeans but I take your point.
>>
>> Regards
>>
>> David
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>              Denise Goodfellow
>>              <
>>              nd.com.au>
> To
>>                                        <>,
> Mark
>>              24/11/09 03:33 PM         Carter
>>                                        <>,
>>                                        Birding Aus
>>                                        <>
>>
> cc
>>
>>
> Subject
>>                                        Re: Subject: [Birding-Aus] Re
>>                                        'Jabiru'
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> I suggest that seeing Victoria got rid of its Magpie-geese and they're so
>> important to people like the Kunwinjku in Arnhem Land, that their name be
>> adopted - Manimanuk.
>> Denise
>>
>>
>> on 24/11/09 1:46 PM,  at
>>  wrote:
>>
>>> Wombats are still badgers in parts of Tasmania!
>>>
>>> Excellent suggestion Mark.   There will be problems with the plethora of
>>> Aboriginal languages (and the difficulty English speakers have
>> pronouncing
>>> Aboriginal words) and differences between their taxonomy and that of
>>> Western science but and it shouldn't be too great a task.
>>>
>>> Consider the following:
>>>
>>> Western Kulin names (from southwestern Victoria)
>>>
>>> Maerii - Gang Gang Cockatoo
>>> Pirtuup - Sandpiper
>>> Wilann - Black Cockatoo [probably Red-tailed]
>>>
>>> Eastern Kulin names (from central Victoria)
>>>
>>> Kruk-wor-rum - Snipe
>>> Dulum - Black Duck
>>> Bath-mum - Wood Duck
>>> Uu-gup - King Parrot
>>> Barrawarn - Australian Magpie
>>> Tee-yung - Rose Robin
>>> Nup-nup or Bik-mum - [Magpie] goose
>>>
>>> Some of the words may not use the linguistically preferred spelling but
>> you
>>> should get an idea of what could work.
>>>
>>> Regards
>>>
>>> David
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>              Mark Carter
>>>              <markthomascarter
>>>              @yahoo.co.uk>
>> To
>>>              Sent by:                  
>>>              birding-aus-bounc
>> cc
>>>              
>>>
>> Subject
>>>                                        Subject: [Birding-Aus] Re
> 'Jabiru'
>>>              24/11/09 01:55 PM
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I agree with Philip Veerman's post- the confusing 'Jabiru' is just the
>> tip
>>> of the iceberg when it comes to Australian bird common names. I think
>>> settlers did Australian birds a great diservice when they set about
>> naming
>>> them after the vaguely similar species of elsewhere but it was
>>> understandible. What I don't understand is the way 21st century
>> ornithology
>>> persists with these clumsy confusing labels. A Red-capped Robin is not a
>>> robin in much the same way than a Koala bear is not a bear. Mammologists
>>> have gotten over this dodgy inheritance years ago- native cats are now
>>> almost universally renamed quolls, marsupial mice are now dunnarts (or
>>> antichinus or psuedo antichinus or...) and porcupines are now echidnas.
>>> Australian birds such as shrike-thrushes, woodswallows, wrens, chats,
>>> magpies, babblers and treecreepers are intrinsically awesome and don't
>>> deserve to be encumbered by these clumsy, 2nd hand, confusing and often
>>> dreadful misnomers (shrike-thrush particularly makes me cringe). These
> is
>> a
>>> vast and rich source of authentic names in the many Aboriginal languages
>> of
>>> our continent- is it outragous to suggest we consider this?
>>>
>>> Mark Carter
>>> Alice Springs
>>>
>>>
>>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>>
>>> --
>>>
>>> Date: Mon, 23 Nov 2009 23:15:24 +1100
>>> From: "Philip Veerman" <>
>>> Subject: [Birding-Aus] Re 'Jabiru'
>>> To: "'Tony Russell'" <>
>>> Cc: "Birding-aus \(E-mail\)" <>
>>> Message-ID: <>
>>> Content-Type: text/plain;    charset="us-ascii"
>>>
>>> Surely their proper name is the Australian Black Satin-necked non-jabiru
>>> Stork. (joke)
>>>
>>> Why doesn't some book author take the initiative to rename some bird
>>> groups to simpler things, like rename the Cuckoo-shrikes as Cush e.g.
>>> "Black-faced Cush" and likewise invent other new names, so we can
>>> dispense with all those silly names like "Cuckoo-shrike" (not a joke).
>>> After all, names are just labels, why not have distinctive ones that
>>> don't give wrong impressions.
>>>
>>> Philip Veerman
>>> 24 Castley Circuit
>>> Kambah  ACT  2902
>>>
>>> 02 - 62314041
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ==============================www.birding-aus.org
>>> birding-aus.blogspot.com
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>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
>


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