bottle-o
English
Pronunciation
- (General Australian) IPA(key): /ˈbɔdl̩əʉ/
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈbɒtələʊ/
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
- (Australia, New Zealand, informal) A bottle shop.
- (Australia, informal, obsolete) A door-to-door trader in used bottles.
- 1918, Norman Lindsay, The Magic Pudding, page 14:
- For travellers have to carry bags, / And swagmen have to hump their swags / Like bottle-ohs or ragmen.
- a. 1922, Henry Lawson, 1984, Leonard Cronin (editor), A Fantasy of Man: Henry Lawson Complete Works, 1901-1922, Part 2, page 546,
- Time was when my old friend, Benno the bottle-o, drew his turn-out into the shade of the big old fig-trees under the church at the top of the hill, and went back and thrashed the most notoriously brutal driver well and good.
- 1970, Patrick White, The Vivisector, Vintage, published 1994, page 574:
- And Pa, that bottle-o, drunk once on misery.
- 1985, Peter Carey, Illywhacker, Faber and Faber, published 2003, page 103:
- the bottle-oh with the cleft tongue rode his wagon wrapped tight in an old grey blanket and had his battle-oh cries blown westwards before the icy gusts of wind.
- 2010, Kathleen M. McGinley, Out of the Daydream: Based on the Autobiography of Barry Mcginley Jones, page 74:
- Another character was the bottle-o man. He would come around on weekends down the lane standing on a dray driven by an old horse while he cried out: “booooddle-o, any old rags and boddles? Booooddle-o”.
- 2011, Richard Plant, Life's a Blur, unnumbered page:
- When Kate was a girl living in Albert Park, a lifetime before she met Rex, her bottle-o had some sort of motor truck. Some of us can remember the horse and cart used by the bottle-o, the milk-o, the ice-man, and especially the woodman.
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