Upscale suggested a what is it? type competition on the meaning of Aussie
slang, so I thought I'd give it a go. The winner gets a years supply of hens
teeth.
........ a bit of a preamble.
The origins of Australian slang are much argued about. Some would have it
that it is a direct offshoot from cockney rhyming slang, others say it
developed here around the beginning of last century. Much of it is vulgar
and deliberately so. The English landed gentry were greatly offended by much
of it, which pleased the Aussies no end. The word bastard is probably the
most common and confusing. Depending on context and inflection, it can have
many different meanings. Most are not intended to be offensive. The English
however, found it's use highly offensive in any context, which suited us
just fine.
An example of a an exchange that famously occurred during a test cricket
match between England and Australia in the 1930's: The English captain
walked into the Australian dressing rooms after the match and complained
that one of the Australians had called him a bastard.
The Australian captain turned to his players and said "all right, which one
of you bastards called this bastard a bastard?"
It's used all over Australia, but just to make it more confusing, it's usage
can differ state by state. My good wife hails from NSW, I'm a Western
Australian and she has never heard some expressions that were commonly used
here in W.A. To make it nearly impossible, some words which are spelled and
pronounced the same, can have entirely different meanings. It's also
continuously added to, so some of it arose in recent times. Slang was seldom
used by women.
Try this on for size. What is the conversation all about?
"The missus says she saw a Joe Blake. Thought I'd go take a captain."
"Do you need a hand?"
"Nah. I've got me bowyangs and I'll give it a burl with the bluey. She'll be
apples"
diggerop : )
"diggerop" wrote
> The origins of Australian slang are much argued about. Some would have it
> that it is a direct offshoot from cockney rhyming slang, others say it
> developed here around the beginning of last century. Much of it is vulgar
> Try this on for size. What is the conversation all about?
>
> "The missus says she saw a Joe Blake. Thought I'd go take a captain."
> "Do you need a hand?"
> "Nah. I've got me bowyangs and I'll give it a burl with the bluey. She'll
> be apples"
>
> diggerop : )
I'm taking it to the library and while I'm sitting on the throne I'll see if
I can dig it.
Max
On Nov 11, 7:46=A0pm, Robatoy <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Nov 11, 10:21=A0pm, "diggerop" <toobusy@themoment> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Upscale suggested a what is it? type competition on the meaning of Auss=
ie
> > slang, so I thought I'd give it a go. The winner gets a years supply of=
hens
> > teeth.
>
> > ........ a bit of a preamble.
> > The origins of Australian slang are much argued about. Some would have =
it
> > that it is a direct offshoot from cockney rhyming slang, others say it
> > developed here around the beginning of last century. =A0Much of it is v=
ulgar
> > and deliberately so. The English landed gentry were greatly offended by=
much
> > of it, which pleased the Aussies no end. The word bastard is probably t=
he
> > most common and confusing. Depending on context and inflection, it can =
have
> > many different meanings. Most are not intended to be offensive. The Eng=
lish
> > however, found it's use highly offensive in any context, which suited u=
s
> > just fine.
> > An example of a an exchange that famously occurred during a test cricke=
t
> > match between England and Australia in the 1930's: The English captain
> > walked into the Australian dressing rooms after the match and complaine=
d
> > that one of the Australians had called him a bastard.
> > The Australian captain turned to his players and said "all right, which=
one
> > of you bastards called this bastard a bastard?"
> > It's used all over Australia, but just to make it more confusing, it's =
usage
> > can differ state by state. My good wife hails from NSW, I'm a Western
> > Australian and she has never heard some expressions that were commonly =
used
> > here in W.A. To make it nearly impossible, some words which are spelled=
and
> > pronounced the same, can have entirely different meanings. It's also
> > continuously added to, so some of it arose in recent times. Slang was s=
eldom
> > used by women.
>
> > Try this on for size. What is the conversation all about?
>
> > "The missus says she saw a Joe Blake. Thought I'd go take a captain."
> > "Do you need a hand?"
> > "Nah. I've got me bowyangs and I'll give it a burl with the bluey. She'=
ll be
> > apples"
>
> > diggerop =A0: )
>
> I'll print this out and study it in the thunder box.
From the Anti FAQ:
This newsgroup is about USA woodworking and maybe its northern
sycophantic satellite. God Bless America! It's rec.WOODworking, not
rec.TIMBERworking! You guys went downhill when you joined up with the
other Euro-idiots and went with that inane metric system. Serves you
right you gotta pay double for the tools we get for real cheap in the
good ole USA. Anyways, who wants to get buzzed with a 240-volt piece
of euro junk? Buy American! Besides, what kind of woodworking can you
do without Home Despot?
Same goes for drunken Ozzies (as if there were any other kind, I know
it's redundant), and inny othirs who walk upside down. Sheesh,
butchering all that nice jarrah, silky oak & jummywood with those pot
metal Triton POS.
Message for Strines: This newsgroup uses the Queen's English (or at
least the bastardised seppo version). If you want to post in your
weird lingo, m8, go create your own newsgroup, m8. PS: I don't care if
you get pissed off that I stuck you with the whingeing poms, y'all
sound alike anyhoo.
So there!
Luigi
On Nov 11, 8:30 pm, "Ed Pawlowski" <[email protected]> wrote:
> "diggerop" <toobusy@themoment> wrote in message
>
> > Try this on for size. What is the conversation all about?
>
> > "The missus says she saw a Joe Blake. Thought I'd go take a captain."
> > "Do you need a hand?"
> > "Nah. I've got me bowyangs and I'll give it a burl with the bluey. She'll
> > be apples"
>
> > diggerop : )
>
> Wife saw a snake
> bowyangs are boot protectors or leathers
> Chase with the dog? and then she'll be happy
>
> Am I close?
Aussie Haiku? Cool. Tom
On Nov 11, 10:21=A0pm, "diggerop" <toobusy@themoment> wrote:
> Upscale suggested a what is it? type competition on the meaning of Aussie
> slang, so I thought I'd give it a go. The winner gets a years supply of h=
ens
> teeth.
>
> ........ a bit of a preamble.
> The origins of Australian slang are much argued about. Some would have it
> that it is a direct offshoot from cockney rhyming slang, others say it
> developed here around the beginning of last century. =A0Much of it is vul=
gar
> and deliberately so. The English landed gentry were greatly offended by m=
uch
> of it, which pleased the Aussies no end. The word bastard is probably the
> most common and confusing. Depending on context and inflection, it can ha=
ve
> many different meanings. Most are not intended to be offensive. The Engli=
sh
> however, found it's use highly offensive in any context, which suited us
> just fine.
> An example of a an exchange that famously occurred during a test cricket
> match between England and Australia in the 1930's: The English captain
> walked into the Australian dressing rooms after the match and complained
> that one of the Australians had called him a bastard.
> The Australian captain turned to his players and said "all right, which o=
ne
> of you bastards called this bastard a bastard?"
> It's used all over Australia, but just to make it more confusing, it's us=
age
> can differ state by state. My good wife hails from NSW, I'm a Western
> Australian and she has never heard some expressions that were commonly us=
ed
> here in W.A. To make it nearly impossible, some words which are spelled a=
nd
> pronounced the same, can have entirely different meanings. It's also
> continuously added to, so some of it arose in recent times. Slang was sel=
dom
> used by women.
>
> Try this on for size. What is the conversation all about?
>
> "The missus says she saw a Joe Blake. Thought I'd go take a captain."
> "Do you need a hand?"
> "Nah. I've got me bowyangs and I'll give it a burl with the bluey. She'll=
be
> apples"
>
> diggerop =A0: )
I'll print this out and study it in the thunder box.
"diggerop" <toobusy@themoment> wrote in message
>
> Try this on for size. What is the conversation all about?
>
> "The missus says she saw a Joe Blake. Thought I'd go take a captain."
> "Do you need a hand?"
> "Nah. I've got me bowyangs and I'll give it a burl with the bluey. She'll
> be apples"
>
> diggerop : )
>
>
Wife saw a snake
bowyangs are boot protectors or leathers
Chase with the dog? and then she'll be happy
Am I close?
"Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> diggerop wrote:
>> "Luigi Zanasi" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
>> So there!
>>
>> Luigi
>> --------------------------
>>
>> Hey, Luigi, youve been imbibing too much sauce again haven't you?
>
> "Why, fuck you dead, I'm Foreskin Fred, the bastard from the bush."
"I've been in every two up school, from Darwin to the 'loo"
I've got a copy of Lawson's work and also Banjo Patterson's.
The old grandfather couldn't read or write until he was about 30. Had a
fantastic ability to memorize. Could quote anything either of those two
wrote. And lots of other stuff.
He could be introduced to someone spend a short time with them, then come
back many years later, meet them by chance, and he we greet them by name and
then ask after the wife and kids, also by name if he had been told that
years before.
It made him a formiddable opponent on the campaign trail. And scary, - the
old bastard never forgot anything! : )
diggerop
"Luigi Zanasi" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:12f0b139-fb1b-42a9-990b-From the Anti FAQ:
This newsgroup is about USA woodworking and maybe its northern
sycophantic satellite. God Bless America! It's rec.WOODworking, not
rec.TIMBERworking! You guys went downhill when you joined up with the
other Euro-idiots and went with that inane metric system. Serves you
right you gotta pay double for the tools we get for real cheap in the
good ole USA. Anyways, who wants to get buzzed with a 240-volt piece
of euro junk? Buy American! Besides, what kind of woodworking can you
do without Home Despot?
Same goes for drunken Ozzies (as if there were any other kind, I know
it's redundant), and inny othirs who walk upside down. Sheesh,
butchering all that nice jarrah, silky oak & jummywood with those pot
metal Triton POS.
Message for Strines: This newsgroup uses the Queen's English (or at
least the bastardised seppo version). If you want to post in your
weird lingo, m8, go create your own newsgroup, m8. PS: I don't care if
you get pissed off that I stuck you with the whingeing poms, y'all
sound alike anyhoo.
So there!
Luigi
--------------------------
Hey, Luigi, youve been imbibing too much sauce again haven't you?
diggerop wrote:
> "Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> diggerop wrote:
>>> "Luigi Zanasi" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>
>>> So there!
>>>
>>> Luigi
>>> --------------------------
>>>
>>> Hey, Luigi, youve been imbibing too much sauce again haven't you?
>>
>> "Why, fuck you dead, I'm Foreskin Fred, the bastard from the bush."
> "I've been in every two up school, from Darwin to the 'loo"
>
> I've got a copy of Lawson's work and also Banjo Patterson's.
I worked on an offshore seismograph crew out of Darwin and, when in any
pub in any port we could find, Lawson's poems were quoted with the same
regularity that "Waltzing Matilda" was sung ... again, depending upon
the number of Darwin stubbies.
(Ask me about the time we pretty well wrecked the only pub open in Port
Hedland and ended up in gaol for the night (basically a chain link
fenced, dog kennel) ... way before you could get there, easily, any
other way than by boat or plane).
Can't believe the tiny little towns we put into back then, many you
could only get to by boat or plane for much of the year, places like
Cairns, Cook Town, Derby, Port Hedland, Broome, and even Darwin, are now
"cities"! I lived in Cairns for almost a year and the pictures I have of
it are nothing like it is today.
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 10/22/08
KarlC@ (the obvious)
diggerop wrote:
> "Luigi Zanasi" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> So there!
>
> Luigi
> --------------------------
>
> Hey, Luigi, youve been imbibing too much sauce again haven't you?
"Why, fuck you dead, I'm Foreskin Fred, the bastard from the bush."
<g>
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 10/22/08
KarlC@ (the obvious)
"Ed Pawlowski" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "diggerop" <toobusy@themoment> wrote in message
>>
>> Try this on for size. What is the conversation all about?
>>
>> "The missus says she saw a Joe Blake. Thought I'd go take a captain."
>> "Do you need a hand?"
>> "Nah. I've got me bowyangs and I'll give it a burl with the bluey. She'll
>> be apples"
>>
>> diggerop : )
>>
>>
>
> Wife saw a snake
> bowyangs are boot protectors or leathers
> Chase with the dog? and then she'll be happy
>
> Am I close?
>
That was quick.
You got the gist of it, though not exactly. Close enough for me : )
Hens teeth on their way as soon as I get them from the supplier.
Joe Blake = snake
Take a captain = Captain Cook = take a look
Bowyangs = leather straps or often string, used to tie moleskins (Heavy
cotton trousers) to the tops of a man's boot, purpose being to keep grass
seeds out of his boots and socks and also make it more difficult for a snake
to strike the skin of the leg.
Bluey = blue heeler (Australian cattle dog. ) Very fast and protective dogs.
Good ones can grab a snake by the back of the neck and kill it.
She'll be apples = Nothing to do with the wife, - used as a reply to his
mates query if he'd like a hand, it means "no thanks, I'll be fine on my
own."
diggerop
diggerop wrote:
> "Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:ip-dnT1irJV4E2HXnZ2dnUVZ_tudnZ2d@giganews.> to fulfill desires in
> such a tiny town!
>>
>> The local Catholic priest, Father Tobin, IIRC, whose acquaintance we
>> made in the local pub's public bar, would let us and the stewardesses
>> party in the rectory after the pub closed ... and party we did,
>> blessed in _ALL_ aspects of our mutual attractions by Father Tobin's
>> understanding (and, thinking back, possible tinge of envy), for he was
>> a young priest who was 'tres cool' waaaaay before his time!
>>
>> Bless you Father, for we did sin ... :)
>
> Heh. Some really good down to earth types among them, especially in the
> north.
> Was his first name Noel? If so, this is his e-mail add.
>
> [email protected]
>
> Retired from Geraldton diocese, which covers Port Hedland
Being much much closer to a good catholic upbringing at the time, he
was, respectfully, "Father Tobin" to me and I don't recall his first
name, although he couldn't have been ten years older than me.
Son-of-gun! ... (don't know if he would remember, but what the hell, may
give it a go, thanks!).
But damn ... that was 46 years ago!
Small world, eh ...
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 10/22/08
KarlC@ (the obvious)
diggerop wrote:
> "Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>>
>> (Ask me about the time we pretty well wrecked the only pub open in
>> Port Hedland and ended up in gaol for the night (basically a chain
>> link fenced, dog kennel) ... way before you could get there, easily,
>> any other way than by boat or plane).
>>
>
> Coppers have got no sense of humour sometimes : )
They just locked us down so they could get some rest. The next night we
had to move them off the cooler cover to get a beer ... after closing
time. :)
> The pub sounds like the Pier. Had the "Animal Bar" with mesh screens to
> stop the patrons jumping the counter.
>
> Port Hedland has grown to where you probably wouldn't recognise it.
> It's even now bursting at the seams from the demand for accomodation
> created by mining. Infrastructure cannot keep up.To give you an idea,
> house rental prices are currently ranging from $800 per week to $2,500
> per week, - most in the $2000 region. It's killing the small businesses,
> they can't find accomodation for employees that is anywhere near
> affordable. So it has become a soulless place with the majority only
> living there short term in houses where the mining companies pay their
> rent. When the mining stops, it will be a ghost town.
>
> Broome has lost much of its old charm, it's also grown rapidly, but is
> just a very expensive tourist trap. Derby has grown, but nowhere near as
> much, - still a sleepy country town.
IIRC, in Port Hedland it was Ansett-ANA who flew in twice a week with an
overnight layover for the crew. The stewardesses were cute, and so
were we apparently, thus the attraction was mutual, but alas, no where
to fulfill desires in such a tiny town!
The local Catholic priest, Father Tobin, IIRC, whose acquaintance we
made in the local pub's public bar, would let us and the stewardesses
party in the rectory after the pub closed ... and party we did, blessed
in _ALL_ aspects of our mutual attractions by Father Tobin's
understanding (and, thinking back, possible tinge of envy), for he was a
young priest who was 'tres cool' waaaaay before his time!
Bless you Father, for we did sin ... :)
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 10/22/08
KarlC@ (the obvious)
On Thu, 12 Nov 2009 11:21:06 +0800, "diggerop" <toobusy@themoment>
wrote:
>slang, so I thought I'd give it a go. The winner gets a years supply of hens
>teeth.
The only thing I can translate out of this is that hens don't have
teeth, so the winner gets nothing.
As to your Joe Blake test, I'm at a loss from the get go. Guess I need
some cultural immersion.
"Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> (Ask me about the time we pretty well wrecked the only pub open in Port
> Hedland and ended up in gaol for the night (basically a chain link fenced,
> dog kennel) ... way before you could get there, easily, any other way than
> by boat or plane).
>
Coppers have got no sense of humour sometimes : )
The pub sounds like the Pier. Had the "Animal Bar" with mesh screens to stop
the patrons jumping the counter.
Port Hedland has grown to where you probably wouldn't recognise it. It's
even now bursting at the seams from the demand for accomodation created by
mining. Infrastructure cannot keep up.To give you an idea, house rental
prices are currently ranging from $800 per week to $2,500 per week, - most
in the $2000 region. It's killing the small businesses, they can't find
accomodation for employees that is anywhere near affordable. So it has
become a soulless place with the majority only living there short term in
houses where the mining companies pay their rent. When the mining stops, it
will be a ghost town.
Broome has lost much of its old charm, it's also grown rapidly, but is just
a very expensive tourist trap. Derby has grown, but nowhere near as much, -
still a sleepy country town.
diggerop
"Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:ip-dnT1irJV4E2HXnZ2dnUVZ_tudnZ2d@giganews.> to fulfill desires in such
a tiny town!
>
> The local Catholic priest, Father Tobin, IIRC, whose acquaintance we made
> in the local pub's public bar, would let us and the stewardesses party in
> the rectory after the pub closed ... and party we did, blessed in _ALL_
> aspects of our mutual attractions by Father Tobin's understanding (and,
> thinking back, possible tinge of envy), for he was a young priest who was
> 'tres cool' waaaaay before his time!
>
> Bless you Father, for we did sin ... :)
Heh. Some really good down to earth types among them, especially in the
north.
Was his first name Noel? If so, this is his e-mail add.
[email protected]
Retired from Geraldton diocese, which covers Port Hedland
diggerop