Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Australia, New Zealand, informal, colloquial A
wharf labourer orstevedore .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word wharfie.
Examples
-
Swear at the pollies, remembering how they were short changed by the government in WW2 - especially the infamous wharfie strike re ammunitions for the troops.
-
When the forgotten poet and wharfie Ernest Antony wrote Of the Things
-
The Telephone Tree appears in the wonderful oral history of the wharfies, "Under the Hook", by Tom Hills (a wharfie) and Wendy Lowenstein, originally published in 1982 but now reprinted in an expanded form to cover the
The Telephone Tree 1998
-
The TWA also known as the "Dog Licence Act", or the "Dog Collar Act" allowed for the dismissal of the wharfie work force, and their replacement by untrained, non-union workers, each of whom needed only to purchase a licence for one shilling to work on the wharves.
The Pig-Iron Song 1964
-
The TWA also known as the "Dog Licence Act", or the "Dog Collar Act" allowed for the dismissal of the wharfie work force, and their replacement by untrained, non-union workers, each of whom needed only to purchase a licence for one shilling to work on the wharves.
The Oath Of Eureka 1939
-
Of course, for the New Year's Eve bout to go ahead, Trout must first beat Melbourne wharfie Frank LoPorto in Texas on November 11.
-
Former wharfie Mr Stubbs, 72, has been on a pension for several years.
-
Paddy Kenneally (1916-2009) quit his job as a wharfie the day Japan bombed Pearl Harbour in
unknown title 2009
-
Paddy Kenneally (1916-2009) quit his job as a wharfie the day Japan bombed Pearl Harbour in
unknown title 2009
-
In 1951 he took a job as wharfie on the Adelaide waterfront.
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.