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OP An item in today's Melbourne Age reports on a new 400-page Antarctic dictionary and provides some examples:
moop = man out of phase [disoriented]
the big pav = Antarctica
aaaa = a sledge dog command
zucchini = an extended prefabricated hut
big eye = insomnia that goes with being a moop
greenout = an overwhelming sensation induced by seeing and smelling trees and other plants after returning from Antarctica
Kodak poisoning = an affliction visited on a subject of frenzied photography
snotsicle [self-explanatory]
pav=pavement?
And, paulb, I rather thought you were permanently mooped!
snotsicle--ohmigawd. Still, I'd like to go for a short visit.
pav=pavement?
No, pav=pavlova a meringue dessert claimed by both Australians and NZers to have been created first in their countries of origin. This ferocious argument has caused almost as much strife and ill-will as did a disagreement over the proper way to bowl a cricket ball!
Max mooted: No, pav=pavlova a meringue dessert claimed by both Australians and NZers to have been created first in their countries of origin. This ferocious argument has caused almost as much strife and ill-will as did a disagreement over the proper way to bowl a cricket ball!
Disagree. There is no argument over how to bowl a cricket ball. The Wicked Pitchers of the West in Oz just don't know what the right way is ... their new fast bowler is a veritable chucker.
Calling Antarctica "The Big Pav" is definitely an Ozzie expression. I was down there some years ago and I never heard either Deep Freeze or Scott Base people use the term. I suspect most of the others from paulb will fall into the same category.
The idiot also known as Capfka ...
In reply to:There is no argument over how to bowl a cricket ball. The Wicked Pitchers of the West in Oz just don't know what the right way is ... their new fast bowler is a veritable chucker.
Mea culpa. I was simply trying to be as diplomatic as possible about the incident in question. All sentient beings know that it was a heinous crime, one that will guarantee bad karma for the ACB until the end of time!
Repentantly, Max said: Mea culpa. I was simply trying to be as diplomatic as possible about the incident in question. All sentient beings know that it was a heinous crime, one that will guarantee bad karma for the ACB until the end of time!
There are some wounds that time does not heal.
Seems they're skating on more thin ice given this thread. Comments from Oz?
The idiot also known as Capfka ...
paulb,
You beat me to it. I hasten to add that the expressions are purportedly those used by Australians living in Antartica - I have never heard any of them being used by us stay-at-homes.
CapK and Max,
Sorry if you wanted to start an animated exchange on The Underarm Bowling Incident, but on this issue I'm batting on your side. However, in view of the board's international flavour and the relative parochialism of cricket a la British Empire, I thought I'd post the background of the controversy/(ies) to which you refer.
The rules of cricket require the bowler NOT to straighten his arm during the delivery action. This is usually achieved by slinging the ball "over-arm" with a straight arm - I imagine you'll all have seen at least a few balls of cricket on TV, even if you haven't had the pleasure of sitting through an entire five-day Test match (which may have ended in a draw, i.e. was not completed!)
Nothing in the rules requires the ball to be bowled overarm - it's just more effective.
A (comparatively recent) variation on the multi-day cricket match is the limited overs one-day match in which each team has the same number (usually 50) of "overs" (6 balls constitute an over) to score runs, unless all the batsmen are dismissed (well actually 10 of the 11) before then. Team with the most runs win. Pretty straightforward, eh?
The limited overs game has had considerable success in boosting the popularity of cricket, since it results in much more attacking play, more risk-taking, faster scoring rates, more frequent wickets (dismissals), and importantly, exciting finishes. Quite often the game will hinge on whether the team batting second can score, say 15 runs off the last 6 balls, often going right down to the last ball.
In a famous one-day match between Australia and New Zealand way back in 198x (Max or CapK to supply details, I'm not L'ingIU), New Zealand, batting second, required 6 runs (or it may have been 5, but the effect is the same) from the last ball to win the match. The only way to score a six is to hit the ball over the boundary fence on the full. In order to eliminate that possibility, the then captain of the Australian team, Greg Chappell, instructed his bowler, who happened to be his younger brother Trevor, to bowl the ball underarm along the ground. As I recall it, the NZ batsman stopped the ball then threw his bat in disgust, the crowd - at first stunned into silence - booed loudly, followed by a similar reaction from an entire nation. Diplomatic relations were strained.
One NZ newspaper the next day ran the headline "AUSSIES HAVE AN UNDERARM PROBLEM".
What can I say, Max, CapK? I don't presume to speak for all Australians, but I think that there were a lot of us hanging our heads in shame that day, and we still squirm when reminded.
Within the rules? Certainly. But in the spirit of the game? Definitely not! At the time, the expression "it's just not cricket" would have said it all, but as has been noted on this board before, I think, allegations of bribe-taking and match-fixing in international cricket have detracted from the meaning of that expression. Ditto for "the gentleman's game".
Onto a different controversy, Australia has recently suffered accusations that one its fast bowlers, Brett Lee, throws the ball rather than bowls it - i.e. that he straightens his arm as he delivers the ball. Similar accusations have been levelled at other bowlers - most notably by Australian cricket umpire Daryl Hair(sp?) against Sri Lankan bowler Muttiah Muralitharin - see http://iesu5.ust.hk/dfaculty/ravi/murali.html. Cricket doesn't appear to have come up with a good way of dealing with this type of complaint.
I'm sorry, but I just had to glory in the fact that we beat Pakistan. In a test. In a series. In Pakistan!!!! Hooray for England. Three cheers for Mike Atherton, the world's best slow batsman. Hip hip hooray for Graham Thorpe the reliable run-getter. And Hussain's a jolly good fellow! Let their names be writ large in letters of blazing metal upon megaliths to be placed around Lords. Let them be chaired around London and cheered through the counties. Let them even have a ticker-tape parade through the City.
(This from a fan of the country involved in the most famous bowling controversy of all time - Bodyline anyone?)
For those far removed from the hallowed precincts of cricket, let me say that England has, for the last five years been amongst the world's worst teams, but we have now won two Test Series' on the trot. And beating Pakistan, in Pakistan, is something England has only ever done once before, and an achievement that any test team (current Australia perhaps excepted) would be extremely proud of.
Shanks asks: Bodyline anyone?
Speaking of body-line what is leg theory?
(I've been reading the Don's Farewell to Cricket in conjunction with Great Aunt Fanny's Devil's Dictionary: http://cricket.about.com/sports/cricket/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?site=http://home.sprynet.com/sprynet/hotoff/crickgl.htm)
Faldage asks: Speaking of body-line what is leg theory?
This is NOT that kind of forum. See something like: www.leg-theory.attractive-females-of-the-human-persuasion.com
The only leg theory in relation to cricket that I know about is the interesting one which states that if your leg intersperses itself between a legally-bowled ball and the wicket, AND the bowler yells loudly enough AND the umpire is awake AND the third umpire's video cameras have faithfully recorded the event, there's a very good chance that you'll be given out. How do I know this? It's happened to me more than once ....
The idiot also known as Capfka ...
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