mia mia
English
Alternative forms
- mia-mia
Etymology
Borrowed from Kurnai mai-mai[1] or Wathaurong [Term?].
Noun
mia mia (plural mia mias)
- (Australia) An aboriginal shelter made from bark, a gunya.
- 1913, William Henry Fitchett, The New World of the South: Australia in the Making, 2006 Elibron Classics, page 391,
- On the point of this “spear” they erected what looked like a mia-mia, a hut made of branches by the blacks ; across the road opposite to it the trunk of a tree was dragged, leaving a narrow track along which the escort must defile.
- 1914, Baldwin Spencer, Native Tribes of the Northern Territory of Australia, Cambridge University Press, published 2010, page 109:
- Decorated with this mop of hair and the chaplet, the girl was led by her father to the mia-mia and put inside this with the four boys.
- 1932, W. Ramsay Smith, “The Flood and its Results”, in Myths and Legends of the Australian Aborigines, Dover, published 2003, page 160:
- Exhausted, he threw himself down at the door of the mia-mia of the emu and lay there as if dead.
- 1944, H. Lorna Bingham, Tuckonie's Warrior Friend, page 15, column 2:
- "Dan is creeping through the bushes on the other side of the mia-mia."
- 1913, William Henry Fitchett, The New World of the South: Australia in the Making, 2006 Elibron Classics, page 391,
Usage notes
- The word gunya is more common in some parts of Australia.
- The term "mia mia" is already a plural in the local language (where plurality is indicated by repeating the word).
References
- "mia-mia" in Random House Dictionary. Random House, Inc, 2015.
Anagrams
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