The term "koala" (applied to a small Australian marsupial) apparently survives from the Aboriginal language known as "Dharuk", in which the word for the small bear-like creatures was "gula" (koola).
Another possibility:
The first known record of the koala by Europeans came during the time Governor Hunter commanded the NSW colony. After his men returned from an expedition into the Blue Mountains, on 26 January 1798, one reported seeing a new type of animal, resembling a sloth in its movements, which the local natives called a "cullawine".
It would seem the word "koala" has derived from a combination of these two Aboriginal words.
The word koala has thre syllables: ko / a / la
The word koala originated from the languages of the Australian Aborigines.The name is believed to come from the Aboriginal word "gula", which means "no drink." Koalas get their water from the leaves they eat, so they don't require fluid sustenance (although they will drink water in a drought or in extreme heat).There are a number of different names for the koala in various aboriginal dialects. Some of the other names are cola/colah, koolah, boorabee, kaola, burrenbong and koolewong.The first written name for the koala was "koolah", given in an article in the "Sydney Gazette", around 1803.
No, the word koalas is a common noun, the plural form for the singular koala; a word for any koalas anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, thing, or a title; for example:Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary, Fig Tree Pocket, QLD AustraliaKoala Street, Lawrenceville, GA or Koala Court, Antioch, CAKoala Cafe, Stockholm, Sweeden"Klassic Koalas: Ancient Aboriginal Tales in New Retellings" by Lee Barwood
calla, Ebola, fella, koala, phyla, tabla, uvula, villa, viola, voila
There is no need to capitalise the word "kangaroo" or "koala" unless it is used at the beginning of a sentence, e.g. "Koalas are native to Australia", or if it is the actual name of something, e.g. "I called my pet dog Kangaroo because he jumps around a lot".
Koala, koala, please come down from the tree.
The Farsi word for Koala is "کوالا" which is pronounced as "kuwala".
The word "koala" is derived from a similar sounding Aboriginal word, so it probably does not have a Spanish translation.
un koala (masc.)
It is the Aboriginal name of the animal, sometimes given as Kulla, Kula or Koola
koaraThe word koala was borrowed from English, and is simply コアラ (koara) in Japanese.
A ten-letter word for the koala's food is eucalyptus.
The word "koala" is derived from a similar sounding Aboriginal word, so it probably does not have a Spanish translation.
The name 'koala' is thought to have come from an Aboriginal word, possibly kwala - meaning 'no drink' (sometimes translated as "no water"). This is because the koala does not need to drink, taking in all its moisture from the gum leaves it chews. It tends to only seek extra water during prolonged drought or heatwaves.
I like eating roast koala bears
It´s the same word in spanish.
The koala will walk on four legs on the ground. The koala eat about 500g of eucalyptus leaves a day. The koala sleeps 19 hours a day. The Koala was endangered for some time. The female koala has only one young for year.