Kiwi slang

For all the none biking stuff. Say hello, chew the fat or flame the forum.
Post Reply
User avatar
kiwikrasher
Posts: 8862
Joined: 17 Mar 2014, 04:32
Your Bike: ‘16 Thruxton R. '10 Multistrada 1200 S.
Location: Kurrajong Heights, NSW, Australia
Has thanked: 4577 times
Been thanked: 4647 times

Kiwi slang

Post by kiwikrasher »

From time to time I use a word you lot struggle to understand the meaning of due to my kiwi background and the slang of said country. I've slowly learned a lot of your slang and uses, so I thought I'd help you out with mine. This is lifted from a FB post but is a good collection :D

Chur – Thanks Bro!
Cuzzie – Cousin or relative
Dairy – Local convenience stores, sometimes found on corners
Jandals – The things you wear on your feet in summer
Jafa – This one is more of an insult. Jafa is word to call someone from Auckland, the people that come out of Auckland
Munted – Broken, not working
Hungus – Greedy, or a way to call someone a pig. A shortened version of Humungous
Bach – A holiday home, often found by the beach
Sook – Someone that needs to man up and stop whinging
Root – To have sexy time
Tiki Tour – To travel around
Shot – Often used as ‘Shot bro’, meaning thanks bro
Solid – Awesome
Sweet as – Sounds good, awesome, thanks
Pakeha (Par-key-ha) – White man
Heaps – Meaning many, or ‘alot’
A into G – Arse into Gear. Get your sh*t together. Eg. “Get your bloody A into G”
No worries – It’s okay, not a problem
Mean Feed – A real nice meal, often a large meal
Ta – Thank you
Mate – Friend
Not Even – Not true
Sick – Awesome. The ‘i’ must be stretched, pronounced ‘siiiick’
Mean – Awesome The ‘e’ must be stretched, pronounced ‘meeeean’
Happiness is not a destination. It is a way of life.
User avatar
Kwacky
Posts: 38540
Joined: 21 Oct 2013, 21:52
Your Bike: Brutale 800RR, 1000SX Ninja
Location: Brum
Has thanked: 4314 times
Been thanked: 8352 times

Re: Kiwi slang

Post by Kwacky »

Solid here means favour - "do me a solid mate"

Don't get your munted and your munter mixed up. Munter is a derisory term for a female.
Root - search for

Sweet has has died out here - "sweet as a nut" used to be the phrase in the early 90s.

Ta and mate are the same here, especially in the middle of the UK. Us Brummies use "ta" a lot. Ta mate in Birmingham is often replaced with "ta bab". Everyone in Brum is a bab. It's an affectionate version of mate or pal.

Cheers is used more than thanks here.

Some other Brummie stuff

Pop - a fizzy drink
Squash - a cordial drink (not pop)
Sound - catch all saying - "he's sound" (a nice bloke) "I'm sound" (I'm good thanks) "Sound, thanks" (nice one, cheers) etc. "that's sound" (yeah, sure, go ahead)

Mardy - miserable, moody, probably got a cob on
Cob on - in a bad mood
Piecy - (pronounced peace see) a slice of bread. Do you wanna piecy with your chips? (pre-cursor for a chip butty)
Yampee - someone who's a bit soft in the head, a bit simple
User avatar
D6
Posts: 2781
Joined: 14 Mar 2014, 18:26
Your Bike: Speed Triple 1050SE a bit DEAD + S3 RS
Location: Staffordshire
Has thanked: 212 times
Been thanked: 653 times

Re: Kiwi slang

Post by D6 »

Don't forget Bostin - Great
User avatar
kiwikrasher
Posts: 8862
Joined: 17 Mar 2014, 04:32
Your Bike: ‘16 Thruxton R. '10 Multistrada 1200 S.
Location: Kurrajong Heights, NSW, Australia
Has thanked: 4577 times
Been thanked: 4647 times

Re: Kiwi slang

Post by kiwikrasher »

thanks for that Kwacky... I'll be all set when I visit :) Munter means much the same in NZ but can be used for a bloke that is useless at everything, or stuffs up something specific rather badly.

The one that caught me out when I first got to Aussie was "good sort". In NZ that's is used generically for anyone that is a nice person, easy to get on with. In Aussie it's specifically for describing members of the opposite sex you think are hot. So when I said to my ex when we were first going out "that bloke Derek is a good sort" I got a VERY strange look and asked to explain what hell I meant by that (lol)

We has a comedian called Fred Dagg back in the 80's, so someone you think is funny you can say "Old Pete is a bit of a Dagg!" . That translated differently in Aussie, and at my wedding, my best man told my brand new father in law hes was a dag, which the FIL took as he was getting called a dry dangly piece of sheep poo, didn't go down well (lol)
Happiness is not a destination. It is a way of life.
User avatar
Rossgo
Posts: 10407
Joined: 14 Mar 2014, 02:01
Your Bike:
Location: Berkshire
Has thanked: 5280 times
Been thanked: 1326 times

Re: Kiwi slang

Post by Rossgo »

Brilliant post Kiwi

Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk
Post Reply