The word is English but is especially common in Australia, anddoes not there connote squalor or meanness. 331: The table-land is covered by forests of stringy-bark, ofmelaleuca-gum, and banksia.
`Well, it's bush slang, sir, for men just as you or I might benow, looking for work or something to eat; if we can't getwork, living on the country, till things turn round a little. 280: Dancing with their corrobery motion. Black-and-white S.
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