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Bilbul is a village in the central part of the Riverina and situated about 6 kilometres north-east of Griffith and 6 kilometres south-west of Yenda. Bilbul was named in honor of William T Bull, an early landowner from the 1880s. The William Bull Brewery is located at Bilbul and named after William Bull, and thus indirectly also after Bilbul.
The town had a population at the 2011 census census of 672 people. The head office of De Bortoli Wines, the makers of wine brands such as Noble One, a Botrytis Semillon, is at Bilbul.
Bilbul Post Office opened on 6 November 1922. Bilbul Public School was closed down in October 2011 after enrolments fell to an all-time low. After over 80 years of operation, Bilbul lost its general store on March 31, 2017.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), of people aged 15 years and over, 58.6% of people were in a registered marriage and 7.6% were in a de facto marriage.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), 34.6% of people were attending an educational institution. Of these, 29.3% were in primary school, 21.2% in secondary school and 11.4% in a tertiary or technical institution.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), 66.3% of people had both parents born in Australia and 16.8% of people had both parents born overseas.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), of people aged 15 years and over, 67.4% did unpaid domestic work in the week before the Census. During the two weeks before the Census, 31.4% provided care for children and 12.2% assisted family members or others due to a disability, long term illness or problems related to old age. In the year before the Census, 20.1% of people did voluntary work through an organisation or a group.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), 23.1% of single parents were male and 76.9% were female.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), of couple families with children, 26.0% had both partners employed full-time, 6.5% had both employed part-time and 38.2% had one employed full-time and the other part-time.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), 91.2% of private dwellings were occupied and 8.8% were unoccupied.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), of occupied private dwellings 0.0% had 1 bedroom, 8.7% had 2 bedrooms and 42.2% had 3 bedrooms. The average number of bedrooms per occupied private dwelling was 3.5. The average household size was 2.9 people.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), of all households, 78.5% were family households, 21.5% were single person households and 0.0% were group households.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), 18.0% of households had a weekly household income of less than $650 and 15.6% of households had a weekly income of more than $3000.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), 20.0% of occupied private dwellings had one registered motor vehicle garaged or parked at their address, 41.1% had two registered motor vehicles and 34.1% had three or more registered motor vehicles.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), 80.1% of households had at least one person access the internet from the dwelling. This could have been through a desktop/laptop computer, mobile or smart phone, tablet, music or video player, gaming console, smart TV or any other device.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), 62.5% of Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander people were male and 37.5% were female. The median age was 18 years.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), for dwellings occupied by Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander people, the average household size was 2.7 persons, with 1 persons per bedroom. The median household income was $1,875.
In Bilbul (State Suburbs), for dwellings occupied by Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander people, the median weekly rent was $275 and the median monthly mortgage repayment was $1,308.

Thai, Central Thai(historically Siamese), is the national language of Thailand and de facto official language; it is the first language of the Central Thai people and most Thai Chinese, depending on age. It is a member of the Tai group of the Kra-Dai language family, and one of over 60 languages of Thailand. Over half of Thai vocabulary is derived from or borrowed from Pali, Sanskrit, Mon and Old Khmer. It is a tonal and analytic language, similar to Chinese and Vietnamese.
Thai has a complex orthography and system of relational markers. Spoken Thai, depending on standard sociolinguistic factors such as age, gender, class, spatial proximity, and the urban/rural divide, is partly mutually intelligible with Lao, Isan, and some fellow Southwestern Tai languages. These languages are written with slightly different scripts but are linguistically similar and effectively form a dialect continuum.