garbo
English
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Noun
garbo (plural garbos)
- (Australia, informal) A rubbish collector.
- 1986, Emily George, Merri Lee: A Feminist Fantasy, page 124,
- Then believe it or not, I worked for some time as a garbo, collecting the rubbish in the wee hours of the morning.
- 1998, Hall Greenland, Red Hot: The Life & Times of Nick Origlass, 1908-1996, page 253,
- The referendum papers, accompanied by a strong statement of Council′s position, was to be letterboxed by the Council′s “garbos” (rubbish collectors) and inspectors on a Thursday and collected by volunteers over the weekend.
- 2010, Zana Fraillon, Monstrum House: Locked In, unnumbered page,
- As far as Jasper was concerned, his mum being a garbo was pretty cool. She got to drive a truck and be home in time to take his little sisters to school. Before she got the job as a rubbish collector, his mum had done shift work and it was left to Jasper to get his sisters to school.
- 2010, Adam Shand, The Skull: Informers, Hit Men and Australia′s Toughest Cop, page 350,
- The priest would bring salvation while the garbo took the rubbish.
- 1986, Emily George, Merri Lee: A Feminist Fantasy, page 124,
Synonyms
- bin man (UK)
- dustman (UK)
- garbage collector (US, Canada)
- garbage man (Australia, US, Canada)
- refuse collector (UK)
- sanitation engineer (US, Canada)
- trashman (US, Canada)
Esperanto
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɡarbo/
- Hyphenation: gar‧bo
- Rhymes: -arbo
Italian
Etymology 1
From Old High German garwi (“dress; equipment; preparation”), from Proto-Germanic *garwijaną (“to prepare”).[1] More at garb.
Alternatively, perhaps borrowed from Arabic قَالِب (qālib, “model, outline”), from Persian کالب (“form, mold”), from Ancient Greek καλόπους (kalópous, “shoemaker's block”), from κᾶλον (kâlon, “firewood, joiner's wood”) + πούς (poús, “foot”) in which case cognate with English galoshe.
Noun
garbo m (plural garbi)
- politeness, gentleness, tact, grace
- Synonyms: educazione, gentilezza, tatto, grazia
- graceful form
- (nautical) curvature of the hull
Related terms
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the main entry.
References
- Roberts, Edward A. (2014) A Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the Spanish Language with Families of Words based on Indo-European Roots, Xlibris Corporation, →ISBN, page 753
Portuguese
Spanish
Related terms
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