"larrikin" meaning in All languages combined

See larrikin on Wiktionary

Adjective [English]

Audio: en-au-larrikin.ogg Forms: more larrikin [comparative], most larrikin [superlative]
Etymology: Unclear. Suggested are: * A corruption of larking. * From Cornish larrikin ("hooligan"). * From Black Country dialect (area near Birmingham, UK) larrikin ("tongue"); hence, an outspoken person. Etymology templates: {{cog|kw|-}} Cornish Head templates: {{en-adj}} larrikin (comparative more larrikin, superlative most larrikin)
  1. (Australia, slang) Exhibiting the characteristics or behaviour of a larrikin; playfully rebellious against and contemptuous of authority and convention. Tags: Australia, slang Categories (topical): People
    Sense id: en-larrikin-en-adj-W7z7QDc9 Disambiguation of People: 13 45 41 Categories (other): Australian English

Noun [English]

Audio: en-au-larrikin.ogg Forms: larrikins [plural]
Etymology: Unclear. Suggested are: * A corruption of larking. * From Cornish larrikin ("hooligan"). * From Black Country dialect (area near Birmingham, UK) larrikin ("tongue"); hence, an outspoken person. Etymology templates: {{cog|kw|-}} Cornish Head templates: {{en-noun}} larrikin (plural larrikins)
  1. (Australia, New Zealand, slang, dated) A brash and impertinent, possibly violent, troublemaker, especially a youth; a hooligan. Tags: Australia, New-Zealand, dated, slang Categories (topical): People
    Sense id: en-larrikin-en-noun-lrKHzGpk Disambiguation of People: 13 45 41 Categories (other): Australian English, New Zealand English
  2. (Australia, slang) A high-spirited person who playfully rebels against authority and conventional norms. Tags: Australia, slang Categories (topical): People Translations (A mischievous young person, an uncultivated, rowdy but good-hearted person.): rarikena (Maori)
    Sense id: en-larrikin-en-noun-24RtNfyS Disambiguation of People: 13 45 41 Categories (other): Australian English, English entries with incorrect language header, Entries with translation boxes, Pages with 1 entry, Pages with entries, Terms with Maori translations Disambiguation of English entries with incorrect language header: 22 26 53 Disambiguation of Entries with translation boxes: 21 24 55 Disambiguation of Pages with 1 entry: 22 24 55 Disambiguation of Pages with entries: 19 22 59 Disambiguation of Terms with Maori translations: 19 24 57 Disambiguation of 'A mischievous young person, an uncultivated, rowdy but good-hearted person.': 27 73
The following are not (yet) sense-disambiguated
Derived forms: larrikinism

Inflected forms

Alternative forms

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  "etymology_text": "Unclear. Suggested are:\n* A corruption of larking.\n* From Cornish larrikin (\"hooligan\").\n* From Black Country dialect (area near Birmingham, UK) larrikin (\"tongue\"); hence, an outspoken person.",
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        {
          "ref": "1896, Henry Lawson, “A Visit of Condolence”, in While the Billy Boils, Sydney, N.S.W.: Angus and Robertson […], →OCLC, page 209:",
          "text": "How dare you talk to me like that, you young larrikin? Be off! or I'll send for a policeman.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1913, David Paul Gooding, chapter XII, in Picturesque New Zealand:",
          "text": "Another man told me there never had been a staff on the hill; but if there had been, perhaps larrikins would have removed it. For larrikinism is one of the evils of New Zealand. Everywhere there one hears of the larrikin, or young hoodlum. Larrikins are an unorganized, mischievous fraternity. They are always despoiling or marring public or private property or making people the butt of coarse jokes and jeers. If something is stolen, \"the larrikins took it\"; if windows or park seats are broken, \"the larrikins did it.\"",
          "type": "quote"
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        {
          "text": "1938, Xavier Herbert, Capricornia, Chapter II, p. 18,\n“Even Oscar began to drink to excess. But he never bawled and pranced and wallowed in mud and came home in the arms of shouting larrikins.”"
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          "ref": "1988, Gavin Souter, Acts of Parliament: A Narrative History of the Senate and House of Representatives, Commonwealth of Australia, page 432:",
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          "type": "quote"
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        {
          "ref": "2006 September 5, “It's like a part of Australia has died”, in The Guardian:",
          "text": "\"We're all a bit embarrassed by him [Steve Irwin]. He puts that image of Australia to the world - that larrikin attitude - and we're not all like that,\" says Milo Laing, 27, the manager of an Australian-themed bar on Shaftesbury Avenue.",
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        },
        {
          "ref": "2006, Nick Economou, “26: Jeff Kennett: The larrikin metropolitan”, in Paul Strangio, Brian Costar, editors, The Victorian Premiers, 1856-2006, page 363:",
          "text": "From the moment he had become opposition leader following the defeat of Lindsay Thompson's government in 1982, Jeff Kennett had been viewed as a political larrikin.",
          "type": "quote"
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        "(Australia, slang) A high-spirited person who playfully rebels against authority and conventional norms."
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          "_dis1": "27 73",
          "code": "mi",
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          "ref": "1995, Alistair Thomson, “A crisis of masculinity? Australian military manhood in the Great War”, in Joy Damousi, Marilyn Lake, editors, Gender and War: Australians at War in the Twentieth Century, page 138:",
          "text": "Despite his skills as a singer and storyteller, Percy sometimes felt like an outsider among the diggers, excluded by his own ideal and practice of moral manhood from the more larrikin masculinity that he perceived to be predominant.",
          "type": "quote"
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        {
          "text": "2002, Peter Craven, Introduction, in Quarterly Essay, QE 5 2002, page iii,\nMungo MacCallum is hardly typecast as the chronicler of the story of what has gone right and wrong about the business of immigration, regular and irregular, to this country but this most larrikin and cold-eyed of one-time Canberra chroniclers brings to this story all his wit and dryness and power of mind."
        },
        {
          "ref": "2006, Allon J. Uhlmann, Family, Gender and Kinship in Australia: The Social and Cultural Logic of Practice and Subjectivity, page 151:",
          "text": "Another area was occupied by a group of guests with a clearly more larrikin style, and who very much belonged to the dominated fraction.[…]The language used was rather different (more ‘crude’ in the second one), clothing style was different too (less trendy, and much cheaper clothes in the second group), as was appearance in general (heavier tattoos in the second group, more people with bad teeth, more of the men with the working-class goatee) and the interaction was generally more boisterous.",
          "type": "quote"
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  "etymology_text": "Unclear. Suggested are:\n* A corruption of larking.\n* From Cornish larrikin (\"hooligan\").\n* From Black Country dialect (area near Birmingham, UK) larrikin (\"tongue\"); hence, an outspoken person.",
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        {
          "ref": "1896, Henry Lawson, “A Visit of Condolence”, in While the Billy Boils, Sydney, N.S.W.: Angus and Robertson […], →OCLC, page 209:",
          "text": "How dare you talk to me like that, you young larrikin? Be off! or I'll send for a policeman.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "1913, David Paul Gooding, chapter XII, in Picturesque New Zealand:",
          "text": "Another man told me there never had been a staff on the hill; but if there had been, perhaps larrikins would have removed it. For larrikinism is one of the evils of New Zealand. Everywhere there one hears of the larrikin, or young hoodlum. Larrikins are an unorganized, mischievous fraternity. They are always despoiling or marring public or private property or making people the butt of coarse jokes and jeers. If something is stolen, \"the larrikins took it\"; if windows or park seats are broken, \"the larrikins did it.\"",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "text": "1938, Xavier Herbert, Capricornia, Chapter II, p. 18,\n“Even Oscar began to drink to excess. But he never bawled and pranced and wallowed in mud and came home in the arms of shouting larrikins.”"
        }
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      ],
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        "(Australia, New Zealand, slang, dated) A brash and impertinent, possibly violent, troublemaker, especially a youth; a hooligan."
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          "text": "When Browne's turn came, he went down like a true larrikin, giving cheek to the end.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2006 September 5, “It's like a part of Australia has died”, in The Guardian:",
          "text": "\"We're all a bit embarrassed by him [Steve Irwin]. He puts that image of Australia to the world - that larrikin attitude - and we're not all like that,\" says Milo Laing, 27, the manager of an Australian-themed bar on Shaftesbury Avenue.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2006, Nick Economou, “26: Jeff Kennett: The larrikin metropolitan”, in Paul Strangio, Brian Costar, editors, The Victorian Premiers, 1856-2006, page 363:",
          "text": "From the moment he had become opposition leader following the defeat of Lindsay Thompson's government in 1982, Jeff Kennett had been viewed as a political larrikin.",
          "type": "quote"
        }
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        "(Australia, slang) A high-spirited person who playfully rebels against authority and conventional norms."
      ],
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        "slang"
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    {
      "code": "mi",
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      "sense": "A mischievous young person, an uncultivated, rowdy but good-hearted person.",
      "word": "rarikena"
    }
  ],
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}

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          "ref": "1995, Alistair Thomson, “A crisis of masculinity? Australian military manhood in the Great War”, in Joy Damousi, Marilyn Lake, editors, Gender and War: Australians at War in the Twentieth Century, page 138:",
          "text": "Despite his skills as a singer and storyteller, Percy sometimes felt like an outsider among the diggers, excluded by his own ideal and practice of moral manhood from the more larrikin masculinity that he perceived to be predominant.",
          "type": "quote"
        },
        {
          "text": "2002, Peter Craven, Introduction, in Quarterly Essay, QE 5 2002, page iii,\nMungo MacCallum is hardly typecast as the chronicler of the story of what has gone right and wrong about the business of immigration, regular and irregular, to this country but this most larrikin and cold-eyed of one-time Canberra chroniclers brings to this story all his wit and dryness and power of mind."
        },
        {
          "ref": "2006, Allon J. Uhlmann, Family, Gender and Kinship in Australia: The Social and Cultural Logic of Practice and Subjectivity, page 151:",
          "text": "Another area was occupied by a group of guests with a clearly more larrikin style, and who very much belonged to the dominated fraction.[…]The language used was rather different (more ‘crude’ in the second one), clothing style was different too (less trendy, and much cheaper clothes in the second group), as was appearance in general (heavier tattoos in the second group, more people with bad teeth, more of the men with the working-class goatee) and the interaction was generally more boisterous.",
          "type": "quote"
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      ],
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        "Exhibiting the characteristics or behaviour of a larrikin; playfully rebellious against and contemptuous of authority and convention."
      ],
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        "(Australia, slang) Exhibiting the characteristics or behaviour of a larrikin; playfully rebellious against and contemptuous of authority and convention."
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  "word": "larrikin"
}

Download raw JSONL data for larrikin meaning in All languages combined (7.6kB)


This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable All languages combined dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-12-08 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2024-12-04 using wiktextract (bb46d54 and 0c3c9f6). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

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