jackaroo
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Obscure. Possibly from an Aboriginal term meaning ‘wandering white man’.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]jackaroo (plural jackaroos)
- (Australia, Queensland, obsolete) A white man living outside of a white settlement.
- (Australia) A trainee station manager or owner, working as a stockman or farm hand; formerly, a young man of independent means working at a station in a supernumerary capacity to gain experience.
- 1895, A. B. Paterson, Saltbush Bill: The Man from Snowy River and Other Verses, page 37:
- But this is the tale of a Jackaroo that came from a foreign strand, / And the fight that he fought with Saltbush Bill, the King of the Overland.
- 1964, Russel Braddock Ward, The Penguin Book of Australian Ballads, page 86:
- A Jackeroo lived, as a kind of gentleman apprentice, in the squatter′s or manager′s homestead, not in the men′s huts; but most of his daily work was done side by side with the working ‘hands’.
- 1974, The Pastoral Review, volume 84, page 611:
- Frequently the overseer would come to me and say a certain jackeroo was useless, and would never be any good, when the boy had only just started.
Coordinate terms
[edit]- jackarooesse
- jillaroo (“female jackaroo”)
- jilleroo
Verb
[edit]jackaroo (third-person singular simple present jackaroos, present participle jackarooing, simple past and past participle jackarooed)
- (intransitive) To work as a jackaroo.
- Bill has gone jackarooing out west.