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  • kiwi speak collection
  • kiwi speak collection

    The accent used by people in New Zealand is perceived to be a little strange by other countries around the world whose official language is English. In an effort to make their interpretation of the English language easier to follow, we present a list of words, pronunciation, and meanings. Just by following these easy steps you too can hold a conversation with a New Zealander. And what's more, you'll understand what it really means: BETTING: "Betting Gloves" are worn by betsmen in crucket. BRIST: Part of the human anatomy between the "nick" and the "billy". BUGGER: As in "mine is bugger than yours". CHULLY BUN: Chilly Bin, also known as an Esky. COME YOUSE: Former Australian Cricket Captain aka Kimberley John Hughes. DIMMER KRETZ: Those who believe in democracy. ERROR BUCK: Language spoken in countries like "Surria", "E-Jupp" and "Libernon". EKKA DYMOCKS: University staff. GUESS: Flammable vapour used in stoves. SENDLES: Thongs, open shoes. COLOUR: Terminator, murderer. CUSS: Kiss. DUCK HID: Term of abuse directed mainly at males. PHAR LAP: NZ's famous horse which was actually christened "PHILLIP". ERROR ROUTE: As in "Arnotts mulk error route buskets". FITTER CHENEY: A type of long flat pasta not to be confused with "rugger tony". (ed: anyone who has similar offerings to send in will receive our thanks)

  • university
  • university

    n college. As well as having the “University of St. Andrews” in the same way that Americans would have the “University of Oklahoma,” Brits use university as a general term to describe those sorts of institutions: I’m still at university at the moment. Brits do not use the word “college” in that context.

  • Uni
  • Uni

    An abbreviated word for university

  • snap
  • snap

    n ditto; me too: Do you know, I think I slept with that guy in my first year of university. / Oh god! Snap!

  • Keep a Pig
  • Keep a Pig

     An Oxford University phrase, which means to have a lodger. A man whose rooms contain two bedchambers has sometimes, when his college is full, to allow the use of one of them to a freshman, who is called under these circumstances a pig. The original occupier is then said to “keep a pig.”

  • quad (1)
  • quad (1)

    an open space between buildings, usually at a school or a university

  • Read
  • Read

    If someone asks you what you read at university, they mean what was your major at school.

  • postgraduate
  • postgraduate

    n grad student. Someone whoÂ’s finished their university degree and, on the sudden realisation that they might have to actually get a job, has instead leapt enthusiastically into a PhD, a Masters, or some such other form of extended lunch-break.

  • Water Buffalo
  • Water Buffalo

    Originally meant for noisy people but gained notoriety when a Jewish University of Pennsylvania student used it to describe members of a black sorority who held a loud party while he was trying to study. It turned into a hate crime case.

  • school
  • school

    n pre-university education - in the U.K. they call university, well, university.

  • Jodrell Bank
  • Jodrell Bank

    Wank. Just off for a Jodrell .Jodrell Bank was the site of a University of Manchester botanical station, about 20 miles south of Manchester, back in the 1940's. Today, Jodrell Bank is a leading radio astronomy facility.

  • uni
  • uni

    university

  • Interval Training:
  • Interval Training:

    By alternating bursts of light and intense activity, this popular training method helps maximize fat-burning potential while boosting metabolism and cardiovascular fitness levels High-intensity intermittent exercise and fat loss."Boutcher, S.H. School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. Journal of Obesity. 2011; 868305. Metabolic profile of high intensity intermittent exercises..Tabata, I., Irisawa, K., Kouzaki, M., et al. Department of Physiology and Biomechanics, National Institute of Fitness and Sports, Kanoya City, Japan. Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise 1997 Mar;29(3):390-5.. For a quick and effective workout, give one of these beginner programs a try.

  • Uni
  • Uni

    Short for university, we would say we went to uni like you would say you went to school. School here is just for kids.

  • townie
  • townie

    Similar in definition to Chatham Chav, Kappa Slappa, Essex Girl, Shazza etc. They are girls who wear reebok trainers, kappa-sportswear, white puffa jackets, clowns (a really foul type of jewellery which involves a gold, jewelled, preferably moveable, clown (yes, a clown), the bigger the better hanging off a gold chain), lots of reeeeeally tacky 'Ratners' style gold jewellery and hair which can be any of the following hairstyles - plastered to head with a small thin section curled and styled with half a tub of gel and forced to hang next to face; the pineapple (hair in pony tail right on top of head) or extravagant bun (very long hair twisted into an overexaggerated bun) - all of these hairstyles MUST use a gold scrunchie and as much gel as is humanly possible. These girls normally get pregnant by the age of 12 and have boyfriends called Gazza and Kevin. I know you've seen them walking down the street - sadly, everyone has had the misfortune at some time of their life. (ed: now that's what I call a definition!) Talking of definitions, we received this... and I forgot to note who sent it (sorry): I was surprised this one wasn't in the dictionary already. (ed: which it was of course... but never mind the technicalities). I first came accross the word in the early nineties when I was 10-15 years old. We used it to mean exactly the definition you have listed for 'scally'. At some point, perhaps around 1995, 1996 using the word 'townie' went out of fashion and people gradually began to use 'scally' all the time. Today, in the area I come from (Manchester, but esp. South Manchester) you wouldn never hear 'townie' used in this sense, always 'scally'. I have a friend at university who still uses it as we would've done in Manchester in the early nineties. She's from North Yorkshire and says it's still used a lot there. Further still, another university friend, from London, says that to him it means something different from 'scally' and always has done. I'm not quite certain of his definition but he may say, for example, "I don't like going out in Leeds on a Saturday night because it's full of townies" - meaning more like the general 'locals' of any social class, age, dress-style., Sorry for the lengthy explanation! What fascinates me most about this word is the way it was used consistently by people in the area I lived in when I was a younger teenager and then suddenly, within about a year, everyone was using 'scally' instead and 'townie' had become an almost uncool thing to say. I remember thinking to myself - I must start trying to say 'scally' instead of 'townie' so that I sound cool. It's been suggested I pass you on to this url for a fuller description of the phenomenon: http://www.geocities.com/chatham_girls/home.htm

  • Scrumpy
  • Scrumpy

    n strong alcoholic cider. While traditionally the word refers to home-brewed cider (scrumping being the stealing of apples), it has more recently become associated with a high-alcohol brand named Scrumpy Jack. DonÂ’t go near the stuff. I drank some at university one evening and all sorts of bad things happened.

  • Bender
  • Bender

    I used to go out on a bender quite frequently when I was at university. Luckily bender doesn't only mean a gay man, it also means a pub crawl or a heavy drinking session.

  • rag week
  • rag week

    (1) That 'time of the month' when a female is in the period of menstration. If a female got aggressive during this time it would be said that it must be "rag week". A period of the University year dedicated to the raising of money for charity by students. Generally it involves production of a 'joke book' of varying levels of humour which is supported (by advertising) by assorted local businesses and sold in pubs, shops and on the streets during the Rag Week procession. This follows a 'theme' such as 'Give til it hurts' and involves students dressing (or undressing) in a weird an wonderful variety of clothes and then getting totally pissed or stoned in the local afterwards. Good fun!

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  • Nation
  • n.

    One of the divisions of university students in a classification according to nativity, formerly common in Europe.

  • Universities
  • pl.

    of University

  • University
  • n.

    An institution organized and incorporated for the purpose of imparting instruction, examining students, and otherwise promoting education in the higher branches of literature, science, art, etc., empowered to confer degrees in the several arts and faculties, as in theology, law, medicine, music, etc. A university may exist without having any college connected with it, or it may consist of but one college, or it may comprise an assemblage of colleges established in any place, with professors for instructing students in the sciences and other branches of learning.

  • Lyceum
  • n.

    A higher school, in Europe, which prepares youths for the university.

  • Undergraduate
  • n.

    A member of a university or a college who has not taken his first degree; a student in any school who has not completed his course.

  • Honor
  • n.

    Academic or university prizes or distinctions; as, honors in classics.

  • Tripos
  • n.

    A university examination of questionists, for honors; also, a tripos paper; one who prepares a tripos paper.

  • Student
  • n.

    A person engaged in study; one who is devoted to learning; a learner; a pupil; a scholar; especially, one who attends a school, or who seeks knowledge from professional teachers or from books; as, the students of an academy, a college, or a university; a medical student; a hard student.

  • Optime
  • n.

    One of those who stand in the second rank of honors, immediately after the wranglers, in the University of Cambridge, England. They are divided into senior and junior optimes.

  • Magnifico
  • n.

    A rector of a German university.

  • Wrangler
  • n.

    One of those who stand in the first rank of honors in the University of Cambridge, England. They are called, according to their rank, senior wrangler, second wrangler, third wrangler, etc. Cf. Optime.

  • Orator
  • n.

    An officer who is the voice of the university upon all public occasions, who writes, reads, and records all letters of a public nature, presents, with an appropriate address, those persons on whom honorary degrees are to be conferred, and performs other like duties; -- called also public orator.

  • University
  • n.

    The universe; the whole.

  • Sorbonist
  • n.

    A doctor of the Sorbonne, or theological college, in the University of Paris, founded by Robert de Sorbon, a. d. 1252. It was suppressed in the Revolution of 1789.

  • University
  • n.

    An association, society, guild, or corporation, esp. one capable of having and acquiring property.

  • Seminary
  • n.

    A place of education, as a scool of a high grade, an academy, college, or university.

  • Statute
  • a.

    An act of a corporation or of its founder, intended as a permanent rule or law; as, the statutes of a university.

  • Matriculate
  • v. t.

    To enroll; to enter in a register; specifically, to enter or admit to membership in a body or society, particularly in a college or university, by enrolling the name in a register.

  • Wranglership
  • n.

    The honor or position of being a wrangler at the University of Cambridge, England.

  • Magister
  • n.

    Master; sir; -- a title of the Middle Ages, given to a person in authority, or to one having a license from a university to teach philosophy and the liberal arts.

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