Austral English - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Austral English Part 187 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
1844. `Port Phillip Patriot,' July 11, p. 1, col. 3:
"There are four out-stations with huts, hurdles ...
and every convenience."
1846. J. L. Stokes, `Discoveries in Australia,' vol. i.
c. 8, p. 231:
"The usual fare at that time at the out-stations--fried pork and kangaroo."
1870. Paul Wentworth, `Amos Thorne,' c. iii. p. 26:
"He ... at last on an out-station in the Australian bush worked for his bread."
1874. W. H. L. Ranken, `Dominion of Australia,' c. xiii.
p. 232:
"Herds used to be taken from New South Wales to South Australia across what were once considered the deserts of Riverina. That used to be called `overlanding.'"
1890. Lyth, `Golden South,' c. ix. p. 74:
"Several gentlemen were away from the two nearest stations, `overlanding,' i.e. taking sheep, cattle, and flour to Melbourne."
(2) A slang name for a Sundowner (q.v.).
1843. Rev. W. Pridden, `Australia: Its History and Present Condition,' p. 335:
"Among the beings which, although not natives of the bush, appear to be peculiar to the wilds of Australia, the cla.s.s of men called Overlanders must not be omitted. Their occupation is to convey stock from market to market, and from one colony to another."
1846. J. L. Stokes, `Discovery in Australia,' vol. ii. c.
vi. p. 237:
"The Eastern extent of the country of South Australia was determined by the overlanders, as they call the gentlemen who bring stock from New South Wales."
1880. Garnet Walch, `Victoria in 1880,' p. 11:
"Overlanders from Sydney and Melbourne to Adelaide were making great sums of money."
1884. Rolf Boldrewood, `Melbourne Memories,' c. ix. p. 69:
"He gave us the advice of an experienced overlander."
1880. A. J. Vogan, `Black Police,' p. 262:
"An `overlander,'--for, as you havn't any of the breed in New Zealand, I'll explain what that is,--is Queensland-English for a long-distance drover; and a rough, hard life it generally is.
... Cattle have to be taken long distances to market sometimes from these `up-country' runs."
1890. `Melbourne Argus,' June 7, p. 4, col. 1:
"Then came overlanders of another sort--practical men who went out to develop and not to explore."
b.o.o.book Owl-- Ninox b.o.o.book, Lath.
Chestnut-faced O.-- Strix castanops, Gould.
Gra.s.s O.-- S. candida, Tickell.
Lesser Masked O.-- S. delicatula, Lath.
Masked O.-- S. novae-hollandiae, Steph.
Powerful O.-- Ninox strenua, Gould.
Sooty O.-- Strix tenebricosa, Gould.
Spotted O.-- Ninox maculata, Vig. and Hors.
Winking O.-- N. connivens, Lath.
In New Zealand, the species are--Laughing Jacka.s.s, or L. Owl, Sceloglaux albifacies, Kaup (Maori name, Whekau, q.v.), and the Morepork, formerly Athene novae-zelandiae, Gray, now Spiloglaux novae-zelandiae, Kaup. (See Morepork.)
See also Barking Owl.
Drift-O., O. subtrigona, Sow., called so because its beds are thought to be s.h.i.+fted by storms and tides: New South Wales and Queensland. Rock-O., O. glomerata, Gould, probably the same species as the preceding, but under different conditions: all Eastern Australia. And other species more or less rare. See also Stewart Islander. Australian oysters, especially the Sydney Rock-Oyster, are very plentiful, and of excellent body and flavour, considered by many to be equal if not superior to the Colchester native. They cost 1s. a dozen; unopened in bags, they are 6d. a dozen--a contrast to English prices.
1857. `Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Van Diemen's Land,' vol. i. p. 155:
"16 August, 1848 ... A sample of the white resin of the Oyster Bay Pine (Callitris Australis, Brown) lay on the table. The Secretary stated that this tree has only been met with along a comparatively limited and narrow strip of land bordering the sea on the eastern coast of Tasmania, and upon Flinders and Cape Barren Islands in Ba.s.s's Straits; that about Swanport and the sh.o.r.es of Oyster Bay it forms a tree, always handsome and picturesque, and sometimes 120 feet in height, affording useful but not large timber, fit for all the ordinary purposes of the house carpenter and joiner in a country district."
1880. Mrs. Meredith, `Tasmanian Friends and Foes,' p. 222:
"Those most picturesque trees, the Oyster Bay pines, which, vividly green in foliage, tapering to a height of eighty or one hundred feet, and by turns symmetrical or eccentric in form, harmonise and combine with rugged mountain scenery as no other of our trees here seem to do."
The Australasian species are--Pied, Haematopus longirostris, Vieill.; Black, H. unicolor, Wagler; and two other species--H. picatus, Vigors, and H. australasia.n.u.s, Gould, with no vernacular name.
1846. J. L. Stokes, `Discoveries in Australia,' vol. ii.
c. vii. p. 174: