Free Settler or Felon
Convict and Colonial History




Australian Slang - Local Lingo

Unique Phrases - Memorable Quotes - W


A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


WACK-O - exclamation expressing anticipation, approval or delight

WACKO THE DIDDLIO - exclamation of pleasure, esp on seeing attractive woman (WW2)

WADDY - a hunting stick or club once used by Aboriginal natives in hunting and fighting

WAFFLE - talk at length

WAFFLE BURGER - fried savoury takaway food made at Coolangatta 1960s

WAGGING - playing truant from school

WAKE-UP - an alert person (1946)

WALER - a horse from NSW; a favourite of Australian mounted troops

WALKABOUT - indigenous journey; rite of passage

WALK TO BOURKE BACKWARDS - Bob Katter re the gay population in North Qld.

WALLABY BRIGADE - Poem published 1894 about the army of itinerant workers who tramped the bush of Australia between the gold rush years of the 1850's and the First World War

WALLABY TRACK (ON THE) - humping bluey on the bush roads of Australia

WALLOPER - policeman

WALLY - forgetful or clumsy person

WALTZING MATILDA - carrying a swag

Waltzing Matilda -

WALTZING MATILDA - poem written by Andrew Barton Paterson (Banjo Paterson) - 'I got only a fiver for the song, but it's worth a million to me to hear it sung like this' - Banjo Paterson on hearing Waltzing Matilda sung at an army camp at the beginning of WW1

Beloved throughout Australia for more than 40 years, during the years of the Second World War 'Waltzing Matilda' also became famous in far-away places. One account described the feelings it engendered - "Banjo Paterson died in 1941, when his great Australian ballad was sweeping through bombed Britain. We didn't know when we sang about the defiant swagman in the local pubs of Bethnal Green, Tiger Bay, Jarrow, and Govan, that the minstrel boy of the bush country had just passed on and left us this legacy, a drinking song that went as well with Old and Mild as it does with Australian ale. All we knew was that we couldn't sing "Waltzing Matilda" without thinking of brown faces under wide-brimmed Digger hats, of Tobruk "Rats" and guest aircrews of the R.A.A.F., of narrow blue-jean collars and those spitting alleycats of the Mediterranean — the "Scrap Iron" destroyer flotilla of the R.A.N. For many of us, this wryly gay sadly rollicking Australian song was the first stimulus to a new curiosity about the far-flung land."



WANDERING JEW - Stew (soldier slang WW1)

WANKER - contemptible person

WARATAH - a brilliantly coloured red flower; state emblem of NSW

WARRIGAL - Aboriginal term for untamed; esp. dogs and horses

WATCH IT SPORT - threat

WATERBAG - bag made of skin, leather or canvas for keeping water cool

WATERING HOLE - pub

WATTLE AND DAUB - early Australian hut made from a woven lattice of wattle branches which has been is daubed with wet clay, sand or straw

WATTLE DAY - Now held annually on 1st September. First proposed in 1909 by Mr. J. H. Maiden, Mrs. Clunies-Ross and Mrs. Kettlewell with a view to stimulating Australian national sentiment and connecting it with love of the beautiful native flora

WATTLE TREE - botanic acacia. The name wattle was first applied by early settlers from England who had been accustomed to wattling (placing thin, flexible twigs or limbs of trees on to a roof to hold the thatch). When they made their homes in Austrlia they found a suitable timber for wattling was the acacia which they called wattling trees and later wattles

WE ARE ON THE CREST OF A SLUMP - Gold Coast rugby league coach Phil Economidis after a rough trot.

WEEKENDER - a weekend cottage or shack

WE KNEW YOU WOULD FIGHT WELL; WE EXPECTED YOU TO FIGHT WELL; BUT WE DID NOT EXPECT YOU TO ASTONISH THE WORLD - address by French Premier M. Georges Clemenceau thanking Australian troops at the end of WW1

WELCOME TO COUNTRY - Traditionally, a Welcome to Country was an invitation or permission for an indigenous person from different tribal land to enter or pass through. These days it is usually a commercial arrangement; a ceremony performed by a local indigenous person to acknowledge and give consent to events taking place on their traditional lands

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF COUNTRY - acknowledgment of traditional custodianship of the land at the commencement of functions, meetings and presentations of government departments, various sporting events, schools, universities and many other organisations. The ceremony has come to be resented by many non-indigenous Australians who believe it to be an example of tokenism. Indigenous activist Noel Pearson has warned the Acknowledgement of Country is being overused, diminishing the significance of the practice

NO WELCOME TO COUNTRY - In April 2023 academic and activist, Marcia Langton promised/threatened Australian Voice 'NO' voters by predicting the consequences of a failed 'Yes' vote using the following words - "How are they going to ever ask an Indigenous person, a traditional owner, for a welcome to country? How are they ever going to be able to ask me to come and speak at their conference?."If they have the temerity to do it, of course the answer is going to be no."

WE LEFT OUR COUNTRY FOR OUR COUNTRY'S GOOD -Extract from the Prologue at the Opening of the first Playhouse in Sydney 16 January 1796 by ex-convict George Barrington From the Prologue written for the Opening of the Playhouse at NSW 16 January 1796 - George Barrington's 'The History of NSW'










WELL MAY WE SAY GOD SAVE THE QUEEN , BECAUSE NOTHING WILL SAVE THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL - Gough Whitlam in 1975 at the dismissal


WELLIES - wellington boots

WE'LL ALL BE ROONED SAID HANRAHAN - a dismissive response to predictions of disasters or hard times from poem 'Said Hanrahan' by bush poet John O Brien


WERE YOU BORN IN A TENT? - Shut the door!

WE'RE WINNIN' - when tucker is plentiful (Soldier slang WW1)

WERRIS CREEK - leak (urinate) (rhyming slang)

WET AS WATER - ineffective

WHACKLING OUT - thinking deeply about something (1918)

WHACKS - Dutch treat (1942)

WHALER - similar to a sundowner - itinerant worker/ swagman who often appeared at stations at sunset in search of work c. 1885

WHAT DID THAT SET YOU BACK? - How much did that cost?

WHAT DO YOU DO FOR A CRUST? - what do you do for a living?

WHAT DO YOU THINK THIS IS? BUSH WEEK? exclamation when someone does something wrong

WHAT'S THE DAMAGE? - how much is owed?

WHAT THESE MEN DID NOTHING CAN ALTER NOW. THE GOOD AND THE BAD, THE GREATNESS AND SMALLNESS OF THEIR STORY WILL STAND, IT RISES, AS IT ALWAYS WILL RISE, ABOVE THE MISTS OF TIME, A MONUMENT TO GREAT-HEARTED MEN; AND, FOR THEIR NATION, A POSSESSION FOR EVER - Charles Bean, Official War Historian

WHAT'S YOUR POISON? What would you like to drink

WHEN I STAND UP IN PARLIAMENT, THE LABOUR BENCHES WHISTLE - Scott Morrison's thoughts on what the ALP thinks of him

WHEN PEOPLE MEET MY WIFE THEY THINK BETTER OF ME. THEY SAY: "WITH A WIFE LIKE THAT, HE CAN'T BE AS BAD AS WE THOUGHT" - Sir Robert Menzies referring to his wife Dame Pattie

WHEN YOU LEFT THE LODGE, DID YOU GET YOUR BOND BACK? - Norman Gunston to John Gorton

WHERE DEAD MEN LIE - a poem by Australian poet Barcroft Boake. It was first published in The Bulletin magazine on 19 December 1891

WHERE THE BLOODY HELL ARE YOU? -advertising campaign launched by Tourism Australia in 2006

WHERE THE BULL FEEDS - grass (c. 1920s)

WHINGEING POM - An immigrant from England who moans about trifling inconveniences in Australia and constantly compares them to the equivalent back home

WHIPPERSNAPPER - a child

WHIPPY - short for whipping post; 'home' in children's game hide-and-seek

WHIPPY STICKING - (no whippy sticking unless you're 'in'); call by children when playing hide-and-seek warning against staying close to the 'home'

WHIP THE CAT - cry over spilt milk

WHIPS OF TIME - an abundance of time

WHIPS OF TIN -any amount of money

WHISKEY AU GO GO - The Whisky Au Go-Go nightclub in Fortitude Valley, Queensland, caught fire after two drums of fuel were set alight on 8 March 1973 Fifteen patrons died from asphyxiation

WHISTLE AND FLUTE - suit (of clothes)

WHITE ANT - cut in on another's property by subterfuge

WHITE AUSTRALIA POLICY - a set of historical policies in 1901 that aimed to forbid people of non-European ethnic origin from immigrating to Australia

WHITE LOT - silver chain (criminal slang 1925)

WHITE MARY - generic name used by aborigines for all female cooks on out stations

WHITE SHOE BRIGADE - (Qld 1980s) wealthy business people and property developers; politically conservative

WHIZZ BANG - German shell (WW1)

WHIZZER - pickpocket (criminal slang 1925)

WHOLE SHEBANG - ALL

WHO LET FLUFFY OFF THE CHAIN - who farted?

WHOOPDY DO - big deal; sarcastic

WHOPPER - a lie

WHY IS IT SO? - Professor Sumner Miller catch phrase

WIDOW MAKER - tree, deadwood falling branch from eucalyptus gum tree

WIDE BROWN LAND - from Dorothea Mackellar's poem ‘My Country’

WIDGIES AND BODGIES - youth subculture in the 1950s

WIFE BEATER - blue singlet worn by men (American origin?)

WIGWAM FOR A GOOSE'S BRIDLE (going to get) - dismissive reply to an unwanted query

WILD COLONIAL BOY (THE) - bushranger ballad about 'Bold Jack Donohoe'

WILLIES - a feeling of disquiet

WILLING SHILLING WEEK - fund-raising drive held in May in 1950s and 60s when Girl Guides, Brownies and Rangers spent their spare time doing odd jobs to raise money for the association. Equivalent of the Scout's Bob a Job week

WILLY-WILLY - small whirlwind; also called cock-eyed bob or dust-devil

WINDBAG - a talker out of his turn (soldier slang WW1)

WINDMILL J.P. - expression formerly used in NSW for any J.P. who was ill-educated and supposed to sign his name with a cross x. (Morris 1898)

WINGED KEEL - Wing at the base of sailing boat keel. Invented by Ben Lexcen. First used in 1983 America’s Cup on Australia II.

WINTER WILL GROW DARK AND COLD / BEFORE THE WATTLE TURNS TO GOLD - from a poem by James McAuley

WISE UP - understand what's going on

WITCHETTY GRUB - large, white, wood-eating larvae of moths. Bush tucker

WITHIN COOEE - Within ear shot

WITHOUT A CRACKER - to be without money

WOBBLER - soldier toadying for stripes (WW2)

WOG - a flu or virus

WOG - derogatory term for new migrants 1960s and 1970s

WOLF - prison guard who is hard on his men (c. 1893)

WOMBAT - slow moving marsupial of nocutrnal habits; anyone with the same characteristics

WOMBAT TRAIL - election campaign trail by leaders of the National Party. Coined for the Nationals by press gallery during the 1977 federal election campaign

WOMEN OF THE WEST - poem by George Essex Evans - 'The hearts that made the Nation were the Women of the West' first published 1901

WON'T HAVE A BAR OF - refuses to take part

WOOD AND WATER JOEY - a person who hangs about pubs; a doer of odd jobs (1887)

WOODBINE - English soldier ( WW1)

WOOL IS UP - times are good; wool being the staple of Australia c. 1895)

WOOL IS DOWN - times are bad

WOOLOOMOOLOO YANK - flashy dresser (WW2)

WOOL SHED - shearing shed

WOOMERA ROCKET RANGE - Unique military testing range covering 122 188 square kilometres in north-west South Australia. Largest land testing range in the world

WOOP WOOP - the back of nowhere; fictitious

WORKED A STANDOVER - to steal

WORLD SERIES CRICKET - one day cricket games for TV introduced by Kerry Packer

WOULDN'T BE DEAD FOR QUIDS - happy to be alive

WOULDN'T GIVE THE TIME OF DAY - dismissive

WOULDN'T HAVE A BAR OF IT - would have nothing to do with it

WOULDN'T KNOW HIM FROM A BAR OF SOAP - wouldn't recognise someone

WOULDN'T TOUCH IT WITH A TEN FOOT POLE - having nothing to do with it

WOULDN'T WORK IN AN IRON LUNG - doesnt work

WOULD TO GODDER - for the man who would to god he could go to the front, but preferred to stay at home (WW1)

WOWSER - boring conservative narrow minded person; killjoy. In 1916 Australian poet C. J. Dennis defined a wowser as 'an ineffably pious person who mistakes the world for a penitentiary and himself for a warder'

WRAP YOUR LAUGHING GEAR ROUND THAT - to eat something

WRECK OF THE NEVA - Convict ship with 150 female prisoners and children wrecked on King's Island in 1835

WRECK OF THE CATARAQUI - British barque. Immigrant ship. Sank off the south-west coast of King Island in Bass Strait on 4 August 1845. 400 people drowned

WRECK OF THE DUNBAR - wrecked near the entrance to Sydney Harbour in 1857 with the loss of 121 lives

WUSS - weak ineffectual