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Aussie idiom
Hello,
What does a person mean when they say "you have a rear way of playing with words"?
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Re: Aussie idiom
Are you sure it wasn't "real way of playing with words."?
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Re: Aussie idiom

Originally Posted by
Pirimillo
Hello,
What does a person mean when they say "you have a rear way of playing with words"?
Are you sure it's an Aussie idiom? I've never heard it, and it doesn't sound Aussie.
What's your source?
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Re: Aussie idiom

Originally Posted by
Raymott
Are you sure it's an Aussie idiom? I've never heard it, and it doesn't sound Aussie.
What's your source?
I don't know about an idiom, but I think the word might have been "rare", not "rear" or "real".
She has a rare talent.
You have a rare way of dealing with things.
It just means "unusual" or "uncommon". I don't think it's particularly Australian though, unless there's a user from Australia here who can think of a particularly Aussie idiom using "rare".
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Re: Aussie idiom
That's much more likely - 'rare' meaning 'extraordinary/unusual'.
I agree that it's not particularly Australian, but I've often noticed that languages in a colonial context can be both conservative and innovative - and 'rare' in that sense is almost archaic in Br Eng. Similarly, the word 'contrary' - meaning something like 'argumentative' (which in the UK is known chiefly in the nursery rhyme 'Mary Mary/Quite contrary) - is common in Australian English. In Br Eng, we tend to say 'headstrong', 'opinionated', (informally) 'bloody-minded, 'mischievous', 'argumentative', 'curmudgeonly', 'hard to get on with, 'obstructive, 'obstreperous''.... or whatever near-synonym is most appropriate.
b
Last edited by BobK; 01-Mar-2012 at 11:02.
Reason: Fix typo and add 'contrary' analogy
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Re: Aussie idiom

Originally Posted by
BobK
Similarly, the word 'contrary' - [...] is common in Australian English.
b
I would not have said so. Can you present anything to convince me it's common here?
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Re: Aussie idiom

Originally Posted by
Raymott
I would not have said so. Can you present anything to convince me it's common here?
Only anecdotal evidence. Several Australians that I know use it. Perhaps what I've noticed is a common trait among Australians who have emigrated, or perhaps I'm just wrong.
b
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Re: Aussie idiom
Hello,
I could have been a typo be the 'sender'. I think I have it figured out.
Thanks to all of you.
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