/ˈbʌn.di/
OriginFrom Bundaberg + -y (“diminutive suffix”).
- A surname from Middle English.
- Australia, colloquial, diminutive, form-ofDiminutive of Bundaberg, a coastal city of Queensland.
““You are coming out to Gayndah?”
“Yes; when I′m trailing the lungfish.”
“Hope I′ll see you there. Here′s Bundy. Good-bye.””
“Bundaberg, a provincial city famous for its rum, had been Ted′s last seat in the State Parliament before his retirement. Ted rang me. ‘Will you do me a favour in Bundy?’ he asked. ‘Of course, what is ”
“There is a seaside town not far away from Bundy.”
- Australia, abbreviation, alt-of, slangAbbreviation of Bundaberg rum.
“Graeme looked sulkily into his grog cabinet at the hole where his Laphroig^([sic]) should have been. Couldn′t have flogged the bloody Grouse, or the Bundy, nah it had to be the friggen good stuff. Lit”
“It was bloody hard work and bloody hot, so we drank gallons of bloody beer and bloody Bundaberg, in the good old bloody Queensland tradition. Enough, maybe, to wash away any bloody asbestos dust. Bloo”
“He has also brought more Bundy and cola cans, and offers these to the women as he and his mates go about the men′s business of fixing the mechanical issues that stand in the way of the bight′s other m”
- A tree, Eucalyptus goniocalyx
FormsBundys(plural) · Bundies(plural) · bundy(alternative) · bundies(plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0