"The Bush", if lined with trees and undergrowth. If it is more open territory, it is usually called 'country'. If it is further out away from most civilization, it is referred to as "The Outback".
As there are only a handful or so of major Australian cities, the vast majority of the continent is 'rural'. It is nearly all rural.Australians call these rural areas names such as 'the country',...
Areas that are well away from the main coastal settled regions are generically referred to as the 'outback.' Often these areas are associated with rainfall that is low and are many hundreds of miles...
The Outback, or the Desert.The desert proper is rarely called the Outback; but certainly much of the territory bordering true desert and even the Nullabor Plain itself can be called the Outback
Yes. Australia had been known by this name since 1824. Matthew Flinders was the one who suggested the name "Terra Australis" and this became Australia, the name officially adopted in 1824.