calzephyr: MLP Words (MLP Words)
[personal profile] calzephyr
Pavlova - noun.

I sense a theme happening--today's word is another dessert, pavlova. One of those words often mentioned, but never really defined, a pavlova is a baked meringue topped with fruit and whipped cream. It has a fascinating history as it is a 20th century invention, named after the Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova.


Pavlova dessert.JPG
By Hazel Fowler - Own work, Public Domain, Link


sallymn: (words 6)
[personal profile] sallymn

shonky [shong-kee]

adjective:
(Australian and NZ informal)
1 of dubious integrity or legality
2 unreliable; unsound

Examples:

"The council decided, without going to tender, to contract the YMCA," Mr Penning said. "It was a pretty shonky process... and [the council] washed their hands of it." (Brittany Murphy, Hopes float on 50m pool, Goulburn Post, February 2016 )

It's nice. The souvenirs from Doctor Who look insane on your shelf because they're disembodied body parts or monster faces or weird, shonky tech. (Dan Seddon and David Opie, Doctor Who boss and star reveal what they took from set ahead of final episode, Digital Spy, October 2022)

Olive Cotton made deliberate choices. Her choices don’t sit comfortably with contemporary women but retrospective theorisation is a shonky business. (Helen Elliott, Why Olive Cotton turned her back on photography, designboom, January 2020)

Each time I opened
the shonky bathroom door, the wrought-iron latch
had to be fought against. (Richard O'Brien, 'Closed Doors')

The word is that when the market crashed he was mixed up in a couple of shonky ventures and his minders got him out just in time. John Cleary, Murder Song)

Origin:

C19, perhaps from Yiddish shonniker or from shoddy + wonky (The Free Dictionary)

calzephyr: Scott Pilgrim generator (Default)
[personal profile] calzephyr
Swy - noun.

Swy, or two-up is a coin-flipping gambling game played in Australia.

The rules were a bit more than I could paraphrase in a few sentences, so I'll direct you over to the Wikipedia page.

Have you played two-up?
calzephyr: Scott Pilgrim generator (Default)
[personal profile] calzephyr
Waddy - noun.

Waddies, also called a nulla-nulla or boondi, is a heavy and pointed club traditionally used as a weapon, for hunting or as a tool by Indigenous Australian people.


Arrernte Keulen EthnM.jpg
By User:FA2010 - Own work, Public Domain, Link


sallymn: (words 6)
[personal profile] sallymn

larrikin [lar-i-kin]

noun:
1 (Australian English) a boisterous, often badly behaved young man
2 a person with apparent disregard for convention; a maverick

Examples:

Cleaver Greene, the fictional cocaine-snorting, alcohol-swilling, lovable larrikin lawyer from TV’s Rake is hardly a conventional poster boy for Victoria’s courts. (Tammy Mills and Adam Cooper, Leave it to Cleaver: Richard Roxburgh to front court education videos, The AgeDecember 2021)

Constantly on television, the cocky larrikin with a penchant for drinking and womanising had been the preferred prime minister in opinion polls long before he entered Parliament. (Steve Evans, Albanese channels Labor legend with A Better Future campaign, The Sydney Morning Herald, December 2021)

Soaring over them all is the larrikin; almost archly self-conscious – too smart for his own good, witty rather than humorous, exceeding limits, bending rules and sailing close to the wind, avoiding rather than evading responsibility, playing to an audience, mocking pomposity and smugness, taking the piss out of people, cutting down tall poppies, born of a Wednesday, looking both ways for a Sunday, larger than life, sceptical, iconoclastic, egalitarian yet suffering fools badly, and, above all, defiant. (Manning Clarke, quoted by Graham Strahle, Does Classical Music Need More Aussie Larrikins?, Music Australia, January 2017)

"They're like the larrikins of the forest. They get excited. They get a bit high on the sugar load. They scramble around amongst the branches, and they love wild weather." (Steve Evans, Rare swift parrot lands in Canberra, The Canberra Times, May 2021)

Origin:

'street tough, rowdy,' 1868, Australia and New Zealand, of unknown origin; perhaps somehow from the masc. proper name Larry. (Online Etymology Dictionary)

Larrikin is a quintessentially Australian term. It appeared in the 1860s for a street rowdy or urban tough. The writer Archibald Forbes described the larrikin as 'a cross between the Street Arab and the Hoodlum, with a dash of the Rough thrown in to improve the mixture.' Vicious fights between larrikin gangs were common. In the late nineteenth century some gangs formed a subculture with a dress style that included broad-brimmed hats, gaudy waistcoats, strapped moleskin trousers and high-heeled boots.

Early suggestions of its origins were fanciful. The obituary in the Melbourne Argus in 1888 of a police officer named James Dalton said that he had accidentally invented it in a court hearing through a mishearing of his saying larking in his broad Irish accent. This was countered by a letter in a later edition, which argued that it was instead from leery; the writer said it had became a catchword of Melbourne youths in the 1860s from its appearance in a popular London song, The Leery Cove. Locals started to call the boys leery kids, which was transmuted over time into larrikin. A related story of the same period was that criminals in local jails described themselves as leery kin, which was similarly amended through the Irish brogue of their jailers. Kin was also invoked in Larry’s kin, the supposed relatives of some unknown Australian. This has been linked to another Australianism, happy as Larry, recorded first around the same time as larrikin. The supposed connection with Irishmen in two of the tales has led to some writers on language declaring larrikin to be an Irish word.

We can dispose of all of these stories at a stroke by looking across the Tasman Sea. Larrikin is recorded in New Zealand in 1866, two years before Australia. There can be little doubt that the word had a common origin in the old country. The English Dialect Dictionary has larrikin as a dialect term of Warwickshire and Worcestershire for a mischievous or frolicsome youth. It would seem to have become significantly modified in sense during its journey to the Antipodes.

In modern Australian English, larrikin has been inverted into a term almost of respect. The old sense of a tearaway or hooligan has been replaced by that of a non-conformist and irreverent person with a careless disregard for social or political conventions, someone who may be thought truly Australian. (World Wide Words)


[identity profile] sallymn.livejournal.com

skerrick [sker-ik]
noun:
1 (informal Australian, New Zealand usually with negative ) The smallest bit, semblace, trace

Examples:

While the judge accepted his guilty plea was indicative of remorse, he noted there was "not one skerrick of remorse" in his police interview. (Meliisa Iaria, Vic driver jailed over Dutch cyclist death, Yass Tribune, 2019)

You can feel the performance wilt every time it shifts 'gears', proving there isn’t a skerrick of truth in the claim that "this stepped operation also improves acceleration performance incrementally". (Neil Mackay, Honda attempts a return to form with new-generation Accord – and largely succeeds, Go Auto, 2019)

You’ll use every lesson you’ve learnt, every skerrick of drive and every ounce of experience you have. (Kakadu National Park looks for park manager, Herald News, 2017)

Origin:

Early 19th century of unknown origin. The word is also recorded as an English slang term meaning ‘halfpenny’. (Oxford English Dictionary)


[identity profile] sallymn.livejournal.com

furphy [fur-fee]
noun:

1 Australian informal: a rumour or story, especially one that is untrue or absurd

Examples:

Whether that talk is pro-fusionist or anti-fusionist, it is misleading and a distraction from the real issues – in short, a furphy! (Tilbury, Michael, Fallacy or Furphy?: Fusion in a Judicature World, UNSW Law Journal)

However, Clinton Kitt, who regularly uses the park with his two sons, said perceived congestion at the station was a furphy. "It is not a busy, busy thoroughfare that for hours on end has people going both ways and if it was, the council would be looking at fixing the underpass," Mr Kitt said. (Toby Prime, Fitzroy North residents oppose Yarra Council’s draft plan for $600k pathway through Rushall Reserve, Herald Sun)

It has been argued that if we continue to have a forestry industry, we will not have a tourism industry. That is just a furphy, because the tourism industry has developed very well side by side with the forestry industry. The suggestion that we can put all the timber workers out of work and suddenly employ them in the tourism industry is another furphy. (Old Hansard - Parliament of Western Australia)

Origin:

First World War: from the name painted on water and sanitary carts manufactured by the Furphy family of Shepparton, Victoria; during the war they became popular as a place where soldiers exchanged gossip, often when visiting the latrines. (Oxford English Dictionary)



(ps – yes, I know as an Australian this is a bit indulgent, but I used the word on an international online forum this week, and got a chorus if "what's that??" I hadn't even realised it was a regionalism!! so had to get it in, folks, had to get it in)


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