billy
See also: Billy
English
Etymology
Of obscure origin. Perhaps from the name Billy, a diminutive of William, or a variant of bully (“companion, mate, comrade”). Compare Scots billie (“a comrade; companion”).
Pronunciation
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -ɪli
Noun
billy (plural billies)
- A billy club.
- A billy goat.
- 1970 August, Valerius Geist, Mountain Goat Mysteries, Field & Stream, page 62,
- Then, during three days, I was amazed to see nannies with kids attack and chase off large billies.
- 1992, Dwight R. Schuh, Mountain Goat (Oreamnos americanus), in Bowhunter's Encyclopedia, page 276,
- In fact, distinguishing between billies and nannies isn't necessarily a sure thing.
- 1970 August, Valerius Geist, Mountain Goat Mysteries, Field & Stream, page 62,
- (Geordie) A good friend.
- 1786 July 31, Robert Burns, “On a Scotch Bard Gone to the West Indies”, in Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, Kilmarnock, East Ayrshire: Printed by John Wilson, OCLC 922031953; reprinted Kilmarnock: James McKie, March 1867, OCLC 367976637, page 184:
- Fareweel, my rhyme-compoſing billie! / Your native ſoil was right ill-willie; / But may ye flouriſh like a lily, / Now bonilie! / I'll toaſt ye in my hindmoſt gillie, / Tho' owre the Sea!
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- (Australia, New Zealand) A tin used by bushmen to boil tea, a billypot.
- For quotations of use of this term, see Citations:billy.
- (Britain, Australia, Canada) A billycan.
- Let's get the billy and cook some beans.
- 1889, Ernest Giles, Australia Twice Traversed, 2004, page 239,
- We had been absent from civilisation, so long, that our tin billies, the only boiling utensils we had, got completely worn or burnt out at the bottoms, and as the boilings for glue and oil must still go on, what were we to do with billies with no bottoms?
- 1942, Emily Carr, The Book of Small, "Loyalty,"
- Mother prepared a splendid picnic. […] Rugs, food and the black billy for making tea, were packed into the old baby buggy and we trundled it straight down Simcoe Street.
- 2011, Rod Moss, The Hard Light of Day: An Artist's Story of Friendships in Arrernte Country, unnumbered page,
- Over the fence, in a shallow gully 100 metres away, this guy and his wife were living on the dirt in the open weather with just a blanket, billies, a dog and a transistor radio. They didn't even have water.
- (slang) A condom (from the E-Rotic song "Willy, Use a Billy... Boy")
- A slubbing or roving machine.
- 1840, The Citizen, page 347,
- […] at the time there existed in Dublin and its immediate neighbourhood, “forty-five manufacturers, having twenty-two billies, giving employment to 2885 work people, on whom depended for support 7386 individuals, manufacturing 29,312 pieces of cloth, of various qualities, valued at £336,380.”
- 1840, The Citizen, page 347,
Derived terms
References
- The New Geordie Dictionary, Frank Graham, 1987, →ISBN
- Sceilig: Information Pack for Troops (p. 4)
- The Patrol goes to Camp (pp. 9, 11).
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