Austral English
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Chapter 93 : "I remember nothing but a rather curiously shaped gowai-tree."Goanna, Guana,
"I remember nothing but a rather curiously shaped gowai-tree."
See also Lace-lizard.
1802. G. Barrington, `History of New South Wales,' c. viii.
p. 285:
"Among other reptiles were found ... some brown guanoes."
1830. R. Dawson, `Present state of Australia,' p. 118:
"At length an animal called a guana (a very large species of lizard) jumped out of the gra.s.s, and with amazing rapidity ran, as they always do when disturbed, up a high tree."
1864. J. Ropers, `New Rush,' p. 6:
"The shy guana climbs a tree in fear."
1891. Rolf Boldrewood, `A Sydney-side Saxon,' p. 99:
"A goanna startled him, and he set to and kicked the front of the buggy in."
1896. H. Lawson, `When the World was Wide,' p. 139:
"And the sinister `gohanna,' and the lizard, and the snake."
1849. W. Tyrone Power, `Sketches in New Zealand with Pen and Pencil,' p. 160:
"Engaged in the superintendence of a Maori oven, or a huge gipsy-looking cauldron, called a `go-ash.o.r.e.'"
1877. An Old Colonist, `Colonial Experiences,' p. 124:
"A large go-ash.o.r.e, or three-legged pot, of the size and shape of the cauldron usually introduced in the witch scene in Macbeth."
1879. C. L. Innes, `Canterbury Sketches,' p. 23:
"There was another pot, called by the euphonious name of a `Go-ash.o.r.e,' which used to hang by a chain over the fire.
This was used for boiling."
Black-tailed G.,-- Limosa melanuroides, Gould;
Barred-rumped G.,-- L. uropygialis, Gould.
1890. `Goldfields of Victoria,' p. 13:
"A new line of gold-bearing quartz."
1880. G. Sutherland, `Tales of Gold. fields,' p. 36:
"There were over forty miners thus playing at gold-digging in Hisc.o.c.k's Gully."
1852. J. Bonwick [t.i.tle]:
"Notes of a Gold-digger."
The term had been previously applied in a similar way to the Californian excitement in 1848-49. Called also Yellow fever.
1888. A. J. Barbour, `Clara,' c. ix. p. 13:
"The gold fever coursed through every vein."
1858. T. McCombie, `History of Victoria, c. xv. p. 215:
"All were anxious to get away for the gold fields."
1880. G. Sutherland, [t.i.tle] `Tales of Goldfields,' p. 19:
"Edward Hargreaves, the discoverer of the Australian goldfields ... received L15,000 as his reward."
1890. Rolf Boldrewood, `Miner's Right,' c. ix. p. 91:
"I rode up the narrow street, serpentine in construction, as in all gold-founded towns.h.i.+ps."