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Australian English: When you hear the words ‘bachelor’s handbag’ what comes to mind?

Bachelor’s handbag – a roast chicken takeaway in a plastic bag — has been voted the Australian people’s choice as the new word of the year, the Macquarie Dictionary said on Tuesday.

The Australian English dictionary defined the term as a “noun Colloquial (humorous) a takeaway roast chicken”.

It explained its origin as: “From the fact that such a chicken requires no further preparation before consumption, so is seen as an easy meal favoured by a single person, and is often packaged in a small plastic bag with a handle, resembling a handbag.”  

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The phrase, which came top in an online vote, combines Australians’ love of irreverent wordplay and chicken – also known as “chook”.

Takeaway chicken shops are found in many Australian suburbs and few pub menus fail to offer either chicken schnitzel or chicken parm (Parmigiana).

“We have had a fair bit of feedback that some people call it the tradie’s (tradesperson’s) handbag or the bachelor’s briefcase,” Macquarie Dictionary managing editor Victoria Morgan told AFP.

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Packed roast chicken place on the shelf waiting to sale in the market deli section | Picture: iStock

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“Then of course there’s that little bit of backlash – but I think they have missed the point a bit – you know, someone saying: ‘Oh, I have a family, you don’t have to be a bachelor’. No, no, this is just a name.”

Other gems added to the dictionary this year include a “spicy cough” for a Covid infection, and a “gigafire” for a bushfire that scorches more than 100,000 hectares.

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“Orthosomnia” also earned an entry, even though it is not of Australian origin. It refers to an insomnia “thought to be caused by a preoccupation with obtaining the amount and quality of sleep recommended by a wearable tracking device, often resulting in anxiety”.

The dictionary committee’s formal choice for word of the year was “teal”.

Not just a colour, teal also defines a new crop of independent politicians combining environmental green and conservative blue policies who gained prominence in May general elections.

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“It’s hard to go past teal as an emblem of Australia’s political landscape in 2022,” the committee said.

The Macquarie Dictionary announcement landed less than a week after the Australian National Dictionary Centre, which researches Australian English, also chose teal as its word of the year.

The centre’s shortlist included “cooker”, a derogatory term for a person protesting against Covid vaccines and lockdowns, and “quiet quitting” for an employee not working beyond their specified hours and duties.

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By Agence France Presse
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