terafire

We certainly hope that we won’t need to use the term terafire, a fire burning through more than 1 million hectares. The tera- prefix means ‘monster’.

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Sue ButlerComment
BA.4 and BA.5

These are the new sub-variants of Omicron which have emerged and been identified by the WHO. They have significant differences in their spike proteins from the earlier variants of Omicron which means that they can evade the antibodies provided in previous vaccines.

ZG: 4

They should be a household word but they are not.

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Sue ButlerComment
manifest

This word which has been part of English since Anglo-Norman times has acquired a new meaning in the jargon of life coaches who teach their clients that there is a way for them to fulfil their dreams and become the person they think they might be if they follow some simple steps. The life coach promises that they can manifest their hopes and ambitions if they wish hard enough.

ZG: 6

Given the popularity of personal coaches and life coaches and business coaches, manifestation is on the increase.

ZG: 5

At least half of us have life coaches these days so I am guessing at a fifty per cent frequency.

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Sue ButlerComment
ecomap

As we have all pondered what is happening to our environment, we have become much more familiar with the concept of an ecology, that is, the interrelationship of organisms with the environment. This has proved to be a concept worth exploring in a range of situations, and so we have the ecomap, a visual rendering of the relationships that an individual or a family have with the community in which they live.

ZG: 4

A term that is confined to a specialist context but an interesting extension of the idea that we all live in an ecology.

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Sue ButlerComment
lie flat

This simple action has taken on a political significance in China. The younger generation in China, the Gen Z and young millennials, are beginning to think that life as it is ordained for them in China is not worth the struggle. Work is constant and stress is ever-present. The best thing to do is to lie down and it will all go away.

ZG: 3

Not much known outside China but interesting none the less.

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Sue ButlerComment
novel food

What a confusing world we live in where milk isn’t milk anymore and we have become doubtful about what exactly is in a sausage. Well, we always were doubtful about how much meat was in it but now we can expect that there is no meat at all.

ZG: 5

This is an item of official jargon rather than something we all discuss in the supermarket.

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Sue ButlerComment
monkeypox

The monkeypox virus is related to the smallpox virus but was thought to be much less contagious. It is a virus found in monkeys in the 1950s and then found in humans in the Democratic Republic of Congo in the 1970s. It causes flu-like symptoms and skin rashes or lesions.

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Sue ButlerComment
changing the curtains

Barnaby Joyce referred again to the weatherboard and iron people in his comments on his demotion but the other phrase which emerged was his characterisation of the change of leadership in the Nationals as merely changing the curtains.

ZG: 5

It remains to be seen whether this creative phrase will become a permanent feature of our political jargon.

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Sue ButlerComment
selfie's progeny

Australians can proudly claim selfie as one of their most widely-used contributions to the English language. The ABC is also proud to have given the word a push when it was used by a participant in a chat room on their site in 2002. The participant stated later on that the word was in popular use at the time.

ZG: 8

Selfie itself would have a rating of 10 and for that reason people are also keen to latch onto these variations on the theme.

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Sue Butler Comment
urge surfing

This is a therapy for addictions and ungovernable behaviours in which the sufferer is taught to use a state of mindfulness to ride out an urge in the way a surfer rides out a wave. Just like the wave, an urge will start gradually, build to a peak and then fade away.

ZG: 7

Given the number of us who need to control an urger of some kind, whether it is the desire to consume food or alcohol, or to give in to a tantrum, this therapy will become well known.

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Sue ButlerComment
nimrod

In Australia have picked up the American colloquialism nimrod meaning ‘an idiot’. It has been around for a few years but has probably gained in frequency in recent years. I don’t think that anyone using it today is aware of its history in relation to Bugs Bunny or the Bible.

ZG: 7

A fairly common colloquialism. A new and fashionable way of saying someone is an idiot in a mild kind of way.

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Sue Butler Comment
IMF

When it comes to lambs, IMF is what you are looking for. IMF stands for intra muscular fat, which is what makes cooked lamb juicy. It is measured as the fat percentage in the loin muscle of a lamb and visible as marbling. Lamb producers are now being paid a bonus according to the percentage of IMF they have in their product.

ZG: 3

This one is still in planning so it is not common knowledge yet, but no doubt it will be.

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Sue ButlerComment
flurona

The co-infection of COVID-19 and flu, likely to happen this winter, has been given the name flurona. While there is an increased chance of this happening, it is not common.

ZG: 5

A jokey word that helps us to prepare for the winter combination of increased COVID and flu.

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Sue ButlerComment
care feminism

The feminist dream of the 80s was that women could have it all — a career and a family at the same time. While women were still stumbling around trying to make themselves as much like men as possible in the workplace, we had the rise of the girlboss, the entrepreneurial young woman who created a business or a start-up and rose to the heights of success rapidly.

ZG: 4

This is a concept that some people would like us to address but not one that everyone has taken on board.

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Sue ButlerComment
electronic warfare

Just as there is war on land and at sea, so now there is war in the electromagnetic spectrum. This can be classified as attacking, protective or supportive.

ZG: 5

We are slowly becoming more conscious of the aspects of modern warfare that we need to consider and deal with.

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Sue ButlerComment
hypersonic missile

This is something that is newish to the world and definitely new to us because as part of the AUKUS deal we are about to develop them in cooperation with the US and the UK. They are also topical because Russia fired its first hypersonic missile into Ukraine. Russia is the first country ever to test this kind of missile in combat.

ZG: 5

Those who are into military hardware will find this of interest. The rest of us would prefer to leave them alone.

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Sue ButlerComment
parklet

This is a small park created in a parking space. The original idea came from San Francisco in 2005 where two co-workers found a parking space nearby, put money in the meter for a couple of hours and quickly created a parklet using a roll of turf, a park bench and a potted tree. Two hours later they packed it all up.

ZG: 4

They are not common at the moment but the enthusiasm for them is there so maybe there will be more.

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Sue ButlerComment
sober coach

An alternative name for this is sobriety coach. Apart from the coach in sport we have had life coach, business coach, health coach, and now we have sober coach, the person who can assist a person who wants to stay sober by analysing the danger points in their lives and finding strategies for dealing with them.

ZG: 5

This one is low-level frequency at the moment but definitely on the up and up.

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Sue ButlerComment
lamington

In the Canberra bubble this is the joking reference to the LMITO (lower and middle income tax offset) about which there is some speculation for the next Budget. This tax break was introduced by Morrison as Treasurer in 2018.

ZG: 5

The lamington did make it into the news in the lead-up to the Budget but it is still very much an in-joke.

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