Vocabulary Part 1

 


Frolic - no different meaning than the usual one, I’ve just heard it far more often in daily conversation than is the norm in my life in the States. And I live a pretty frolicsome life

Fling - to send something, ala “fling me a message.”  This makes me wonder, like a frisbee?  Like a fish?  Speaking of fish…

Chocolate fish - a reward or public recognition. “She deserves a chocolate fish!” I have seen one store that carries marshmallows shaped like fish and enrobed in chocolate, so presumably the candy came first and then the expression. Maybe you win them as a prize at school. 

Pottle - medicine cup or any little cup that holds things like dentures or hearing aides

Moli - (for MoliCare, the brand name) an adult brief/diaper

Consultant - most experience doctor on the team (equivalent to “attending”)

Registrar - a doctor in training with several years of experience but not fully through with their clinical program

House Operator - newly graduated doctor, equivalent to an intern

Serviette - napkin

Pack a sad to become morose or depressed, alternately it can mean dead, broken, unusable.

Enrol - enroll. But spelled like that!

Vege - same, any vegetable, but spelled like that. 


Some that I think are more British than Kiwi —

Welly - oomph, to put some extra effort into a thing

Bolshie - (presumably from Bolshevik) an adjective meaning bold, feisty, strong

Comments

  1. Oo, I like "pottle." Seems useful, especially in a medical setting. Is vege pronounced "veg" or is the final e given a sound?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Long e sound at the end, so it's exactly like the US American veggie if someone stole the other g out of it.

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