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Moulak just flying over us just then - a white tailed black cockatoo to welcome you too to
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Moulak just flying over us just then - a white tailed black cockatoo to welcome you too to
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  • 00:01

    Good morning and welcome to the Centre for Aboriginal Studies and it is great to see

  • 00:06

    so many of you here and many of you are first years and second years and hopefully we will

  • 00:10

    see a lot more of you over the next three years as you complete your degrees.

  • 00:16

    My name is Simon Forrest.

  • 00:18

    I'm the Director for Aboriginal Studies at the Centre for Aboriginal Studies here.

  • 00:23

    I'm a Whadjak Nyungar man, from Whadjak country.

  • 00:25

    This is my mother's maternal country and we can trace her family back to her great grandmother

  • 00:33

    living in Middle Swan and her name was Mary Ah Tsing.

  • 00:35

    She was the child of an Aboriginal woman and a Chinese market gardener and my mother grew

  • 00:41

    up at her great grandmother's camp up in Middle Swan just to the north of Perth.

  • 00:49

    Kaya wanju, kaya whanju, whajak nuwak pujeh.

  • 00:55

    That's welcoming you to my mother's country and my country here on the Swan Coastal Plain

  • 00:59

    which stretches Whadjak country from about 50 kilometres to the north of Perth to about

  • 01:05

    50 kilometres to the south and about a hundred kilometres to the east.

  • 01:11

    Moulak just flying over us just then - a white tailed black cockatoo to welcome you too to

  • 01:16

    the Centre for Aboriginal Studies.

  • 01:19

    So part of my welcome ceremony is the smoking and I acknowledge my father's country by using

  • 01:27

    some sandalwood from his country, as part of the smoking.

  • 01:32

    My father's country is Yamtjewongoy country to the north and the east.

  • 01:36

    So I will put some sandalwood on there and I will take some gum off the balga or grass

  • 01:44

    tree as you see as you enter through the door.

  • 01:47

    The crushed up gum is part of the smoking.

  • 01:59

    Come on down.

  • 02:00

    Come and get some smoke on you.

  • 02:13

    Opari is singing out too to you fellas.

  • 02:17

    The Centre for Aboriginal Studies is an Aboriginal place, a Nyungar place for us fellas and we

  • 02:27

    are in an educational institution that is mainly a non Aboriginal place and we come

  • 02:33

    to this learning.

  • 02:34

    What you are coming here to get is to learn and do things and basically you are learning

  • 02:39

    about whitefellas and how they do business and what I say is that so we can infiltrate

  • 02:46

    and get the best of what we can from the whitefella system for our people whatever way that is.

  • 02:52

    And in terms of this rope, you come to this place iwth a set of knowledge and values and

  • 02:57

    ways of knowing and doing for over 50,000 years before present.

  • 03:01

    This rope helps to explain that.

  • 03:03

    It is 25 metres long, this rope, and at this end there is 50,000 years before present at

  • 03:11

    the Escarpment in Arnhem Land.

  • 03:15

    This is 40,000 years before present - this is Middle Swan - this is my mother's people.

  • 03:20

    This is land in the Swan Valley here, 40,000 years before the present.

  • 03:25

    And we go along here and there is various things along this timeline.

  • 03:31

    The earliest cave paintings in France, 30,000 years ago.

  • 03:36

    The earliest evidence of the Indigenous people of Japan, the Haiynu people.

  • 03:41

    And you keep going along this rope till we come up to here, 2,000 years ago, the life

  • 03:47

    and times of Christ.

  • 03:51

    1788, the First Fleet arrived here in Australia over on the Sydney coast.

  • 03:58

    So here's us and here's our knowledge system and our culture.

  • 04:04

    That's what we have got.

  • 04:05

    That's what we have in our values and in our knowledge system.

  • 04:08

    This institution here represents this and the building behind me represents all of that.

  • 04:15

    So you are here and you are bringing all this knowledge, all this collective knowledge for

  • 04:20

    over 50,000 years and use it to your benefit.

  • 04:23

    We are here, we are the dominant force in this place in the Centre for Aboriginal Studies,

  • 04:30

    we are.

  • 04:31

    black people, we are the dominant force.

  • 04:34

    So use that to your advantage and welcome to the Centre for Aboriginal Studies.

  • 04:37

    Thank you.

All

The example sentences of COCKATOO in videos (5 in total of 5)

the determiner cockatoo noun, singular or mass squid noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present also adverb sometimes adverb known verb, past participle as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner glass noun, singular or mass squid noun, singular or mass , for preposition or subordinating conjunction obvious adjective reasons noun, plural ,
moulak proper noun, singular just adverb flying verb, gerund or present participle over preposition or subordinating conjunction us personal pronoun just adverb then adverb - a determiner white noun, singular or mass tailed verb, past tense black adjective cockatoo noun, singular or mass to to welcome adjective you personal pronoun too adverb to to
if preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner gets verb, 3rd person singular present too adverb short adjective in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner back noun, singular or mass , this determiner starts verb, 3rd person singular present to to stick verb, base form up preposition or subordinating conjunction probably adverb like preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner cockatoo noun, singular or mass .
then adverb a determiner cockatoo noun, singular or mass flew noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction and coordinating conjunction sat verb, past tense on preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner tree noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction it personal pronoun was verb, past tense just adverb picture noun, singular or mass - perfect adjective
sees verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner cockatoo noun, singular or mass , a determiner gang noun, singular or mass gang noun, singular or mass cockatoo noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction he personal pronoun says noun, plural gang proper noun, singular gang proper noun, singular cockatoo noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction i personal pronoun

Use "cockatoo" in a sentence | "cockatoo" example sentences

How to use "cockatoo" in a sentence?

  • I have three dogs and a cockatoo.
    -Cathy Rigby-
  • Home life is no more natural to us than a cage is natural to a cockatoo.
    -George Bernard Shaw-

Definition and meaning of COCKATOO

What does "cockatoo mean?"

/ˈkäkəˌto͞o/

noun
parrot with erectile crest, found in Australia, eastern Indonesia.