释义 |
▪ I. bingy, a. north. dial.|ˈbɪŋɪ| [f. bing v.2 + -y.] Said of milk: In the incipient stage of sourness.
1857Mrs. Gaskell C. Brontë (1857) I. 70 The milk, too, was often ‘bingy,’ to use a country expression for a kind of taint which is far worse than sourness. 1884Cheshire Gloss. (E.D.S.), Bingy, a peculiar clouty or frowsty taste in milk. The first stage of turning sour. ▪ II. bingy, n. Austral. slang.|ˈbɪndʒɪ| Also bingee, bingie, bingey, binjy. [Aboriginal.] The stomach, belly. Also attrib.
[1851Rev. D. Mackenzie Ten Years in Australia xiv. 140 They lay rolling themselves on the ground, heavily groaning in pain,..exclaiming, ‘Cabonn buggel along bingee’ (that is, I am very sick in the stomach).] 1859H. Kingsley Recoll. G. Hamlyn II. vi. 94 Don't you fret your bingy, boss; he'll be as good a man as his father yet. 1908E. J. Banfield Confessions of Beachcomber i. iv. 143 Bingie (belly) belonga you, sore fella. Ibid. ii. ii. 301 His ‘debil-debil all the same like dead man’, had ‘sat down’ in ‘Little Jinny's bingey’. 1924D. H. Lawrence & Skinner Boy in Bush 85 Success is t'grow a big bingy like a bloke from town. 1929K. S. Prichard Coonardoo xv. 150 Give them a bit of pain killer or a dose of castor oil when they've got a bingee ache. 1931I. L. Idriess Lasseter's Last Ride ii. 18 Micky landed, whoof! on his bingy. 1963Australasian Post 20 June 44 Plenty tucker here. Just look at those binjies! |