Nghĩa của từ bunyip bằng Tiếng Việt

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Đặt câu có từ "bunyip"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "bunyip", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Y Khoa Anh - Việt. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ bunyip, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ bunyip trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Y Khoa Anh - Việt

1. Bunyip Football Club, Bunyip, VIC

2. [*] The Bunyip is an aquatic mammal

3. It is summoned using a Bunyip pouch

4. Search Memorials in Bunyip Cemetery First Name

5. Bunyip, Cardinia Shire, Victoria, 3815 Australia Show Map

6. Bunyip, also dubbed Titanus Bunyip, is a giant daikaiju created by Legendary Pictures that appears in Legendary's 2019 film, Godzilla: King of the Monsters, as a name briefly seen on a monitor. Bunyip also appeared in his own story, Titanus Bunyip where he fought a titan with Rodan's help also.

7. The Bunyip, Explained [*] The Bunyip gobbles up children and livestock if they inch too close to the edge of the water

8. Definition of Bunyip noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

9. The Bunyip is a large creature from Aboriginal mythology

10. The official Facebook page of the Bunyip Bulldogs Football Club

11. Bunyip recorded a population of 2,468 at the 2016 Census

12. The word "Bunyip" is translated as "evil

13. It is summoned using a Bunyip pouch with 68 Summoning

14. A Bunyip typically inhabits large freshwater inlets or sheltered coastal sea caves where food is plentiful—the Bunyip is equally at home in fresh or salt water

15. A Bunyip typically inhabits large freshwater inlets or sheltered coastal sea caves where food is plentiful—the Bunyip is equally at home in fresh or salt water.

16. A Bunyip is a kind of mythical creature which lives in creeks

17. Despite its cutesy name, the Bunyip is a beast to be feared

18. APPEARANCE Bunyip takes on the appearance of a variety of semi aquatic species.

19. The Bunyip is a water monster said to dwell in Australian waters

20. This Bunyip wants to know what he looks like and who/what he is

21. Bunyip is a creature that appears in Dumb Ways to Die 2: The Games

22. OK - the Bunyip is a mechanical monster that is set up in a lair

23. However, the Bunyip appears to have formed part of traditional Aboriginal beliefs and stories throughout

24. Bunyip is a reddish cryptid with pair of colorful horns reported to live in Australia

25. The Bunyip is a level 81 combat Summoning familiar which requires a Summoning level of 68

26. The Bunyip is a mythical beast of Australian Folklore which also has ties to Aboriginal mythology

27. Bunyip Bunyips are dangerous aquatic predators that resemble a cross between a shark and a seal

28. The Bunyip is a level 81 combat Summoning familiar which requires a Summoning level of 68

29. The Bunyip is a mythical creature from Australian folklore that is said to live in swamps.

30. Bunyip definition is - a legendary wild animal usually described as a monstrous swamp-dwelling man-eater.

31. A Bunyip is a demon native to Australia, residing primarily in lakes, swamps and rivers of the Outback

32. The Bunyip is a fierce and avid hunter, possessing a primal ruthlessness that seems almost evil in its rapacity

33. "The Bunyip" is a song from the 1977 animated/live-action Australian film Dot and the Kangaroo

34. The Bunyip is a fierce and avid hunter, possessing a primal ruthlessness that seems almost evil in its rapacity

35. Bunyip, in Australian Aboriginal folklore, a legendary monster said to inhabit the reedy swamps and lagoons of the interior of Australia

36. The Bunyip is a mythical creature from Australian mythology.It is said to live in swamps, billabongs, creeks, riverbeds, and waterholes.The Bunyip is found in traditional aboriginal beliefs and stories from many parts of Australia, although it is called by several different names in different language groups

37. Bunyip is an amphibious Synapsid Daikaiju serving as a minor Titan in Godzilla:King of the monsters only seen on a monitor

38. It appears in the minigame Bunyip Kumbaya and the intro of Camp Catastrophe were two of them carrying Zany by a …

39. The Bunyip, or kianpraty, is a large mythical creature from Aboriginal mythology, said to lurk in swamps, billabongs, creeks, riverbeds, and waterholes

40. The origin of the word Bunyip has been traced to the Wemba-Wemba or Wergaia language of Aboriginal people of South-Eastern Australia

41. A Bunyip is a feared aquatic predator which makes its home in coastal waters, and looks like an enormous seal with oversized, shark-like teeth

42. ‘A Labor Prime Minister ‘born to be a king’ is destined to produce a ‘powerful Governor-General’, ‘a Bunyip aristocracy’.’ ‘In the early 1850s, when Wentworth chaired the committee appointed to draft a new constitution for NSW, his unsuccessful plea for an upper house based on a hereditary colonial peerage was mocked as a Bunyip aristocracy.’

43. The Bunyip is a mythical creature — a lake monster — from Australian folklore; the word itself means “devil” or “spirit.” According to Aboriginal legend, the bloodthirsty Bunyip inhabited swamps, riverbeds, billabongs (the stagnant backwaters of a river), and even wells, and lay in wait at night to devour any animal or person lurking nearby — although it was said to have

44. ‘A Labor Prime Minister ‘born to be a king’ is destined to produce a ‘powerful Governor-General’, ‘a Bunyip aristocracy’.’ ‘In the early 1850s, when Wentworth chaired the committee appointed to draft a new constitution for NSW, his unsuccessful plea for an upper house based on a hereditary colonial peerage was mocked as a Bunyip aristocracy.’

45. Bunyip is a town in Gippsland, Victoria, Australia, 81 km south-east of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the Shire of Cardinia local government area

46. Australian a legendary monster said to inhabit swamps and lagoons of the Australian interior Word Origin for Bunyip C19: from a native Australian language Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged …

47. The name Bunyip is translated as ‘Devil’ or ‘Spirit’ and the beast has most commonly been described as some kind of lake monster said to dwell in things such as billabongs and swamps.

48. They are classified as a neutral creature.1 1 History 2 Book of Shadows 2.1 Bunyip 3 Notes and Trivia 4 References In 1999, after Phoebe Halliwell had a premonition of her future self being burnt at the

49. Originating from Aborigine lore, the creature known as the Bunyip, also known as the Kianpraty and a variety of other regional tribal names, most of which translate from the Aboriginal words for “devil,” “evil spirit,” or some other ominous moniker, and it is not hard to see why.

50. ‘The bunyip lives in creeks, swamps, and Billabongs and has a loud, bellowing cry.’ ‘The little fish were trapped in Billabongs, which were drying out.’ ‘He was cleaning weeds out of Billabongs up in the Northern Territory when he was a teenager.’ ‘Up jumped the swagman, leapt into the billabong,’