matilda
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See also: Matilda
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Unknown.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]matilda (plural matildas)
- (Australia) A bundle of possessions, often tied up in a sack; a swag.
- 1906, A. B. Paterson, On The Road to Gundagai, The Old Bush Songs, Gutenberg eBook #10493,
- In a week the spree was over and the cheque was all knocked down, / So we shouldered our “Matildas,” and we turned our backs on town, / And the girls they stood a nobbler as we sadly said “Good bye,” / And we tramped from Lazy Harry’s, not five miles from Gundagai;
- 1999, Milton Finkelstein, Global geography:
- When a hobo roams through the outback with a matilda on his back, he is said to be “waltzing matilda.”
- 1906, A. B. Paterson, On The Road to Gundagai, The Old Bush Songs, Gutenberg eBook #10493,