"We saw a very interesting camping place of the natives, containing several two-storied gunyas."
1852. `Settlers and Convicts; or, Recollections of Sixteen Years' Labour in the Australian Backwoods,' p. 211:
"I coincided in his opinion that it would be best for us to camp for the night in one of the ghibber-gunyahs. These are the hollows under overhanging rocks."
1852. G. C. Mundy, `Our Antipodes,' ed. 1855, p. 164:
"A sloping sheet of bark turned from the wind—in bush lingo, a break-weather—or in guneeahs of boughs thatched with grass." [p. 200]: "Guneah." [p. 558]: "Gunneah." [p. 606]: "Gunyah."
1860. G.Bennett, `Gatherings of a Naturalist,' p. 114 [Footnote]:
"The name given by the natives to the burrow or habitation of any animals is `guniar,' and the same word is applied to our houses."
1880. P. J. Holdsworth, `Station, Hunting':
"hunger clung Beneath the bough-piled gunyah."
1885. R. M. Praed, `Australian Life,' p. 19: