Maaaate! Itโs hard yakka keeping a grip on the Queenโs English (or the Kingโs) at the best of time but sport brings out our most eloquent โstrineโ (โoi 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 โdoing a Bradburyโ or cheering for the โTilliesโ as the Australian National Dictionary Centre looks to add new sports-related words and phrases.
Here in the โberra (or the โbra) we have coined the phrase โthe fadersโ for our inconsistent home โrugba leagueโ team. If the opposite side is kicking for a goal, we yell โchewie on yer bootโ. Unlike Parisian dialect, Aussie slang isnโt 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 โEnglishโ loosely).
Mark Gwynn, Australian National Dictionary Centre senior researcher, said sport-related language in Australia ranged from the mundane to poetic.
โAs 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.
โMany Australian rhyming slang terms come from the world of sport like โDorothy Dixโ for a six in cricket, โWally Groutโ for a shout at the bar, โMal Meningaโ for finger, โmeat pieโ for try, and โsausage rollโ for goal.
โSome 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.
โThese 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 publicationโs collection of Australian words and their origins.
Cโmon readers, weโd be stoked if you shared ripper sport-related words here: https://slll.cass.anu.edu.au/centres/andc/form/word-box
If you canโt be stuffed, no wuckers, just grab a sanger and chill.