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Dictionary calls on sporting tragics to step up to the plate in new appeal  

Courtesy of ANU

Whether you barrack for the Tillies or Kookaburras, prefer aerial ping pong to mobile wrestling, or have been known to do a Bradbury, word experts from The Australian ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ University (ANU) want to hear from you.

The Australian ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Dictionary Centre (ANDC) is looking for new contributions for the Australian ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Dictionary, with a focus on sport-related words and phrases.

From skyscraper marks featuring the Sherrin in Aussie Rules, to a cockroach getting sent to the sin bin for a dog shot on a cane toad in rugby league, the language of Australian sport has made a significant contribution to Australian English.

According to ANDC Senior Researcher Mark Gwynn, sport-related language in Australia ranges from the mundane and descriptive to the colourful and poetic.

“As 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,” he said.

“Many Australian rhyming slang terms come from the world of sport like ‘Dorothy Dix’ for a six in cricket, ‘Wally Grout’ for a shout at the bar, ‘Mal Meninga’ for finger, ‘meat pie’ for try, and ‘sausage roll’ for goal.

“Some 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.”

The ANDC are looking for contributions that relate to sport in some way and that might not have made it into the dictionary yet.

“These 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,” Mr Gwynn said.

Each year the ANDC runs an appeal for contributions from the public for the Australian ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Dictionary to build on the publication’s collection of Australian words and their origins.

Past appeals include , , and

“Contributions from the public are a very important way of alerting us to new words, or words that may’ve been overlooked in the past,” Mr Gwynn said.

You can share your sport-related words via the or through the

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