snail mucin

This is of course the slime which a snail secretes to smooth its path over rough terrain, but if you walk into a chemist’s shop and ask for snail mucin you will be shown a bottle of a beauty treatment from South Korea. 

ZG: 5

I’m not sure that snail mucin is everyone’s cup of tea but for those devoted to beauty treatments it is a must.

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HealthSue ButlerComment
step change

A step change is a sudden positive change in outcomes for a business or organisation, or a sudden improvement in the way an individual behaves.  In business it is a radical change in strategy or operations and it is probably in business and marketing and planning that this term is mostly used.

ZG: 6

Trendy for those who want to sound professional.

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BusinessSue ButlerComment
unalive

Sometimes in the online world there are sites which will ban any texts that use the words kill or suicide.  If you want to discuss topics that relate to killing or suicide you need to avoid the actual words and substitute a euphemism.  Unalive has come to fill this role.

ZG: 6

It is in the expanding chat on social media that this code becomes relevant. See algospeak.

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Bazball

Bazball was on show for most Australians this year in the Ashes test series. It was not what people were used to in test cricket where the rule was to play conservatively and protect your wicket.  Test cricket was very different from one-day cricket and T20 where the batter aggressively attempted to score from every ball if possible.

ZG: 10 for cricket enthusiasts

And probably zero for the rest of the community. Who knows how long Bazball will be around?

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SportSue ButlerComment
algospeak

As an editor for Macquarie Dictionary, I see myself as an unusual example of the people who do need to deal with subjects online and in social media that the rest of the world would regard as taboo or offensive. 

ZG: 5

An editor’s needs are niche but this affects many discussions on social media.

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Sue ButlerComment
Gravy Day

In 1996 Paul Kelly wrote a ballad which he called How to Make Gravy.  The song is about a man in prison writing to his brother and thinking about Xmas coming up.

ZG: 7

For many people Paul Kelly’s songs have been the background to our lives for some time now, so this one is probably well known.

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hostile architecture

Have you tried to find a place to sit down in a public space and noticed that the benches are all curved, have arm rests at regular interval, the seat dips in a peculiar way that is rather uncomfortable? 

ZG: 3

This is a jargon word of architects and bureaucrats and local councils.

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SocietySue ButlerComment
fried rice syndrome

There have been so many cases of food poisoning from fried rice that the dish has given its name to the botulism acquired from incorrect storage of cooked rice.

ZG: 4

Most of us have other ways of describing this condition.

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MedicineSue ButlerComment
tick-a-box Aboriginal

This is a term used as a put-down for someone who fulfils a technical requirement to claim Aboriginality without any authentic engagement with Aboriginal culture.   Other terms are JCL (Johnny Come Lately) and DNA Aboriginal.

ZG: 2

Even in the Indigenous community I think this expression is confined to those who are more politically engaged.

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FIGG

Thank goodness for acronyms.  The long name is forensic investigative genetic genealogy, a huge mouthful.  This is a comparatively new tool  (developed in 2018) for solving crimes such as homicide or sexual assault, or for finding missing persons.

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ScienceSue ButlerComment
glass cliff

Women seeking senior positions in organisations, government and private, lead dangerous lives.  First they have to break through the glass ceiling, that barrier which is invisible but very effective in preventing women from being selected for the top jobs, despite their having the necessary qualifications.  Having shattered that ceiling they may find themselves confronted by the glass cliff

ZG: 7

Both these words are markers of the observation that the workplace is structured to favour men.

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BusinessSue ButlerComment
phrogging

This is the practice of living in someone’s house without their knowledge.  Usually it involves finding a hidey-hole — in the roof, under the floorboards, in the attic or basement, etc.  — and emerging when the residents of the house are out.

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SocietySue Butler Comment
bitumen bandit

This is a shonky tradie operating in regional Australia where there is a demand for bitumen on roads near houses that would otherwise raise a lot of dust. The bitumen bandit arrives offering what seems to be a price that is too good to be true for putting down bitumen.

ZG: 4

The alliteration in bitumen bandit makes it appealing. Our only other bandit appears to be the one-armed bandit.

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SocietySue ButlerComment
silent walking

This is a TikTok trend which has attracted a number of enthusiastic followers.  The idea is that you go for a walk but first you unplug yourself from whatever devices are occupying your time and attention.  Remove the earbuds and headphones so that you can observe your surroundings and listen to the sounds made in the environment.

ZG: 5

It is a thing of the moment. Whether it will last is another matter.

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digital blackface

Sometimes white people think that black people are better at expressing their feelings in ways that are confident and cool. So they borrow these expressions in social media to fill the gap in their own communicative abilities.  But this is considered most inappropriate.

ZG: 6

This has emerged as part of an ongoing debate about the appropriateness of this style of expression in social media.

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Soc mediaSue ButlerComment
dejab

The experience of wearing the hijab is one that is steeped in religious and cultural significance.  Similarly the decision to dejab, to cease to wear the hijab, is accompanied by fear that your family and community may reject you as a consequence.

ZG: 6

The wearing or not wearing of the hijab is an issue for a minority of women in Australia but for them it has enormous significance.

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SocietySue ButlerComment
skills passport

This is a system for securely storing one’s education and training accreditations in one digitised system that allows for the individual employee to update and verify their details and for employers to access the database to find the workers with the skills that they need.

ZG: 3

Government jargon at the moment but it could become common.

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planetary boundary

Fifteen years ago a group of scientists identified nine processes vital to the Earth system in an attempt to clarify what climate change was going to mean to us all.  Three of these processes are based on what we are removing from the environment.  The other nine are what we have put into the system to its detriment.

ZG: 5

WE should be paying more attention to planetary boundary but it is still probably part of the jargon of scientists rather than mainstream.

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