gidgee
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɡɪd͡ʒi/
Audio (Southern England) (file) - Rhymes: -ɪdʒi
![](../I/Gidgee_trees.jpg.webp)
Gidgee trees
Etymology 1
Borrowed from Wiradjuri gijir.
Alternative forms
- gidgea, gidyea
Noun
gidgee (plural gidgees)
- (Australia) Any of various trees of the genus Acacia, especially Acacia cambagei. [from 19th c.]
- 1890, Joseph Henry Maiden, Wattles and Wattle-barks: Being Hints on the Conservation and Cultivation of Wattles, Together with Particulars of Their Value:
- Acacia homalophylla, A. Cunn., B. Fl., ii., 383. "Curly or Narrow-leaved Yarran." A "Myall." Called also "Gidgee."
- 1964, Stan Coster (lyrics and music), “By a Fire of Gidgee Coal”:
- Since my early days of droving the years have taken toll, / But I somehow miss my swag wrap by a fire of gidgee coal.
- 1997, Alexis Wright, Plains of Promise, in Heiss & Minter, Macquarie PEN Anthology of Aboriginal Literature, Allen & Unwin 2008, p. 186:
- Although he lay with some sense of security beneath a gidgee tree, his father's totem, he was brooding about how he could get rid of the pigeons.
Derived terms
Alternative forms
Noun
gidgee (plural gidgees)
- (Western Australia) A type of long spear. [from 19th c.]
- 1965, Mudrooroo, Wild Cat Falling, HarperCollins, published 2001, page 12:
- “What say we catch gilgies? I've got a gidgee hidden down the river bank. There's some real big ones this time of year.”
- 2007, Craig Silvey, Jasper Jones, Allen & Unwin, published 2007, page 96:
- I take up the shovel and hold it aloft like a gidgee, but the centipede has disappeared.
- 2017, Thomas Wilson, Stepping Off: Rewilding and Belonging in the South-West:
- The locals fished by herding fish into the sandy shallows and spearing them with their gidgees.
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