Austral English. Edward Ellis Morris. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Edward Ellis Morris
Издательство: Bookwire
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4057664653857
Скачать книгу
Carl Lumholtz, `Among Cannibals' [Title of illustration], p. 122:

      "A warrior in great excitement just before Borboby commences."

      <hw>Boree</hw>, <i>n</i>. aboriginal name for the tree <i>Acacia pendula</i>, A. Cunn., <i>N.O. Leguminosae</i>; a variety of <i>Myall</i>, probably from Queensland aboriginal word <i>Booreah</i>, fire. It would be preferred by black or white man as firewood over any other timber except <i>giddea</i> (q.v.).

      1889. J. H. Maiden, `Useful Native Plants,' p. 363:

      "Weeping, or true myall. It is sometimes called bastard gidgee in Western New South Wales. Called boree by aboriginals, and often boree, or silver-leaf boree, by the colonists of Western New South Wales. Nilyah is another New South Wales name."

      1890. Rolf Boldrewood, `Squatter's Dream,' iii. p. 30:

      "Myall and boree belts of timbers."

      1893. `The Times,' [Reprint] `Letters from Queensland,' p. 6o:

      "The timber, of course, when seen close at hand is strange. Boree and gidyah, coolibah and whitewood, brigelow, mulgah, and myall are the unfamiliar names by which you learn to recognise the commonest varieties."

      <hw>Borer</hw>, <i>n</i>. name applied to an Australian insect. See quotation.

      1876. W. Harcus, `South Australia,' p. 110:

      "There is another destructive insect called the `borer,' not met with near the sea-coast, but very active and mischievous inland, its attacks being chiefly levelled against timber. This creature is about the size of a large fly."

      <hw>Boronia</hw>, <i>n</i>. scientific and vernacular name of a genus of Australian plants, certain species of which are noted for their peculiar fragrance. The genus is especially characteristic of West Australia, to which out of fifty-nine species thirty-three are confined, while only five are known in Tasmania. Boronia belongs to the <i>N.O. Rutaceae</i>.

      1835. Ross, `Hobart Town Almanack,' p. 72:

      <i>"Boronia variabilis</i>. A beautiful little heath-like plant growing about the Cascade and other hills round about Hobart Town. … This genus is named after Borone, an Italian servant of the late Dr. Sibthorp, who perished at Athens. … Another species found in Van Diemen's Land is the Lemon plant of the mountains."

      1896. `The Melburnian,' vol. xxii., No. 3, August 28, p. 53:

      "Winter does not last for ever, and now at each street corner the scent of boronia and the odour of wattle-blossom greet us from baskets of the flower-girl."

      <hw>Boss-cockie</hw>, <i>n</i>. a slang name in the bush for a farmer, larger than a Cockatoo (see <i>Cockatoo, n</i>. 2), who employs other labour as well as working himself.

      <hw>Botany Bay</hw>, <i>n</i>. lying to the south of the entrance to Port Jackson, New South Wales, the destination of the first two shiploads of convicts from England. As a matter of fact, the settlement at Botany Bay never existed. The "First Fleet," consisting of eleven sail under Governor Phillip, arrived at Botany Bay on January 18, 1788. The Governor finding the place unsuitable for a settlement did not land his people, but on January 25 removed the fleet to Port Jackson. On the next day (January 26) he landed his people at Sydney Cove, and founded the city of Sydney. The name, however, citing to popular imagination, and was used sometimes as the name of Australia. Seventy years after Governor Phillip, English schoolboys used "go to Botany Bay" as an equivalent to "go to Bath." Captain Cook and his naturalists, Banks and Solander, landed at Botany Bay, and the name was given (not at first, when the Bay was marked Stingray, but a little later) from the large number of plants collected there.

      1770. `Captain Cook's Original Journal,' ed. by Wharton, 1893, p. 247:

      "6 May. … The great quantity of plants Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander found in this place occasioned my giving it the Name of Botany Bay."

      1789. [Title]:

      "The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay," published in

       London.

      1789. Captain Watkin Tench [Title]: "A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay," published in London.

      1793 G. Barrington [Title]:

      "Voyage to Botany Bay," [published in London.]

      This was the popular book on the new settlement, the others being high priced. As Lowndes says, "A work of no authority, but frequently printed." Barrington, the pickpocket, whose name it bears, had nothing to do with it. It was pirated from Phillip, Collins, etc. It went through various editions and enlargements to 1810 or later. After 1795 the name was altered to `Voyage to New South Wales.'

      1798. D. Collins, `Account of the English Colony in New South Wales,' vol. i. p. 502:

      "The word `Botany Bay' became a term of reproach that was indiscriminately cast on every one who resided in New South Wales."

      1840. Thos. Hood, `Tale of a Trumpet:

      "The very next day

       She heard from her husband at Botany Bay."

      1851. Rev. David Mackenzie, `Ten Years in Australia,' p. 50:

      " … a pair of artificially black eyes being the Botany Bay coat of arms."

      1852. J. West, `History of Tasmania,' Vol. ii. p. 91:

      "Some gentlemen, on a visit to a London theatre, to draw the attention of their friends in an opposite box, called out <i>cooey</i>; a voice in the gallery answered `Botany Bay!'"

      1894. `Pall Mall Budget,' May 17, p. 20, col. 1:

      "The owner of the ship was an ex-convict in Sydney—then called Botany Bay—who had waxed wealthy on the profits of rum, and the `shangai-ing' of drugged sailors."

      <hw>Botany-Bay Greens</hw>, <i>n</i>. a vegetable common to all the colonies, <i>Atriplex cinereum</i>, Poir, <i>N.O. Salsolaceae</i>.

      1810. G. Barrington, `History of New South Wales,' p. 263:

      "Botany Bay greens are abundant; they much resemble sage in appearance; and are esteemed a very good dish by the Europeans."

      1834. Ross, `Van Diemen's Land Annual,' p. 134:

      "I do not think it necessary to enter upon any description of the Barilla shrubs (<i>Atriplex halimus, Rhagodur billardiera</i>; and <i>Salicornia arbuscula</i>), which, with some others, under the promiscuous name of Botany Bay greens, were boiled and eaten along with some species of seaweed, by the earliest settlers, when in a state of starvation."

      1835. Ibid. p. 69:

      "Atriplex Halimus. Barrilla. Botany Bay Greens. This is the plant so common on the shores of Cape Barren and other islands of the Straits, from which the alkaline salt is obtained and brought up in boats to the soap manufactory at Hobart Town. It has been set down as the same plant that grows on the coast of Spain and other parts of Europe."

      1889. J. H. Maiden, `Useful Native Plants,' p. 9:

      "Once used as a pot-herb in New South Wales. Leichhardt used a species of <i>Atriplex</i> as a vegetable, and spoke very highly of it."

      <hw>Botany-Bay Oak</hw>, or <hw>Botany-Bay Wood</hw>, <i>n</i>. a trade name in England for the timber of <i>Casuarina</i>. See <i>Beef-wood</i>.

      <hw>Bottle-brush</hw>, <i>n</i>. name given to various species of <i>Callistemon</i> and <i>Melaleuca</i>, <i>N.O. Myrtaceae</i>; the <i>Purple Bottle-brush</i> is <i>Melaleuca squamea</i>, Lab. The name is also more rarely given to species of <i>Banksia</i>, or <i>Honeysuckle</i> (q.v.). The name <i>bottle-brush</i> is from the resemblance of the large handsome blossoms to the brush used to clean