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Wednesday, January 22, 2025

C’mon! Calling all Aussie lexicon and larrikins

Maaaate! Itโ€™s hard yakka keeping a grip on the Queenโ€™s English (or the Kingโ€™s) at the best of time but sport brings out our most eloquent โ€œstrineโ€ (โ€œoi oi oi!โ€), so word experts from The Australian National University are re-writing the dictionary.

As the Olympics draw near, our collective thoughts turn to โ€œdoing a Bradburyโ€ or cheering for the โ€œTilliesโ€ as the Australian National Dictionary Centre looks to add new sports-related words and phrases.

Here in the โ€˜berra (or the โ€˜bra) we have coined the phrase โ€œthe fadersโ€ for our inconsistent home โ€œrugba leagueโ€ team. If the opposite side is kicking for a goal, we yell โ€œchewie on yer bootโ€. Unlike Parisian dialect, Aussie slang isnโ€™t exactly the language of love.

From skyscraper marks featuring the Sherrin in aerial ping-pong (Aussie Rules), to a cockroach getting sent to the sin bin for a dog shot on a cane toad in State of Origin (up the mighty blues!), the lexicon of Aussie sport has made a significant contribution to Australian English (we use the term โ€œEnglishโ€ loosely).

Mark Gwynn, Australian National Dictionary Centre senior researcher, said sport-related language in Australia ranged from the mundane to poetic.

โ€œAs well as many common words, like oval, sundry, mark, offie, minor premier, and barrack, Australian English includes dishlicker, esky lidder, petrolhead, waxhead, up there Cazaly, and Black Caviar odds,โ€ Mark said. 

โ€œMany Australian rhyming slang terms come from the world of sport like โ€˜Dorothy Dixโ€™ for a six in cricket, โ€˜Wally Groutโ€™ for a shout at the bar, โ€˜Mal Meningaโ€™ for finger, โ€˜meat pieโ€™ for try, and โ€˜sausage rollโ€™ for goal.

โ€œSome people might not realise that common Australian words and expressions such as drongo, home and hosed, sledge, fang it, and no-hoper originate in the sporting world.โ€

There are also the infamous budgie smugglers for speedos, runners for sneakers, hoons for fast drivers, and gnarly for big surf.

The ANDC is looking for sport-related contributions that have not yet made it into the dictionary. 

โ€œThese terms could be anything from types of tackles and kicks, like chicken wing tackle or mongrel punt, to words used in backyard sports like tippy-go or six-and-out,โ€ Mark said.

Each year the ANDC runs an appeal for contributions from the public for the Australian National Dictionary to build on the publicationโ€™s collection of Australian words and their origins.

Cโ€™mon readers, weโ€™d be stoked if you shared ripper sport-related words here: https://slll.cass.anu.edu.au/centres/andc/form/word-box

If you canโ€™t be stuffed, no wuckers, just grab a sanger and chill.

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