Aussie
noun
- Australian
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈɔzi/ / /ˈɒzi/ / /ˈɒsi/
adj
Etymology: From a clipping of Australian (or Australia) + -ie. The spelling likely adopted the visual template of the pre‐existing personal diminutive Aussie (from Austin or Augusta). However, while the personal nickname retains standard English phonics with a voiceless /s/, the pronunciation of the national slang (IPA⁽ᵏᵉʸ⁾: /ˈɒzi/) was driven by a highly productive morphophonological template in Commonwealth slang that strongly favors short stressed vowels and lenited consonants. The clipped base promotes the historically unstressed initial vowel to the short IPA⁽ᵏᵉʸ⁾: /ɒ/. This reflects a broader Commonwealth phonological rule where the /ɔː/ typically associated with the ⟨au⟩ digraph is shortened before a tautosyllabic /s/ or /s/‐cluster (as in austral). To lock in this short vowel on the page and prevent readers from reverting to an open‐syllable pronunciation, writers doubled the s as a structural dummy consonant. This created an orthographic trap. The spelling effectively represents a conservative /ˈɔːsi/, preserving the standard phonetic values of both the long vowel and the voiceless fricative. However, the egalitarian colloquial register actively demanded the lenited (voiced) /z/ (compare Tassie, Brissie, possie, cossie). Thus, the dialect compromised by writing the conservative, etymological ⟨ss⟩, while speaking the colloquial /z/. Though popularized internationally as military slang from 1915 onwards, early printed evidence shows the clipping was already active in Australian sporting vernacular by at least 1913. * 1913 January 29, The Referee, Sydney, page 14: “Aussie,” as the “heads” prefer to call Australian, won by 1min 14sec from the second boat, Lilian.
- Australian.
“From the Marvel Mixmaster to the Miracle Microwave, every time a new-fangled gadget has lobbed into the Aussie kitchen, Aussie mums have changed their cooking styles accordingly.”
“Most Aussie officers seemed this way to me; always cool, deliberate, and extremely rational in their decision making, a far cry from the American leadership I had seen during my first year in the army.”
name
Etymology: From a clipping of Australian (or Australia) + -ie. The spelling likely adopted the visual template of the pre‐existing personal diminutive Aussie (from Austin or Augusta). However, while the personal nickname retains standard English phonics with a voiceless /s/, the pronunciation of the national slang (IPA⁽ᵏᵉʸ⁾: /ˈɒzi/) was driven by a highly productive morphophonological template in Commonwealth slang that strongly favors short stressed vowels and lenited consonants. The clipped base promotes the historically unstressed initial vowel to the short IPA⁽ᵏᵉʸ⁾: /ɒ/. This reflects a broader Commonwealth phonological rule where the /ɔː/ typically associated with the ⟨au⟩ digraph is shortened before a tautosyllabic /s/ or /s/‐cluster (as in austral). To lock in this short vowel on the page and prevent readers from reverting to an open‐syllable pronunciation, writers doubled the s as a structural dummy consonant. This created an orthographic trap. The spelling effectively represents a conservative /ˈɔːsi/, preserving the standard phonetic values of both the long vowel and the voiceless fricative. However, the egalitarian colloquial register actively demanded the lenited (voiced) /z/ (compare Tassie, Brissie, possie, cossie). Thus, the dialect compromised by writing the conservative, etymological ⟨ss⟩, while speaking the colloquial /z/. Though popularized internationally as military slang from 1915 onwards, early printed evidence shows the clipping was already active in Australian sporting vernacular by at least 1913. * 1913 January 29, The Referee, Sydney, page 14: “Aussie,” as the “heads” prefer to call Australian, won by 1min 14sec from the second boat, Lilian.
- A diminutive of the male given names Austin, Osborn, or Oswald.
- A diminutive of the female given names Augusta or Austina.
- the nation or continent of Australia (now uncommon except in sporting chants and in New Zealand).
- An Australian (person).
- An Australian Shepherd dog.
- The Australian dollar.