Greens climate change spokeswoman Senator Christine Milne said the land-use push appeared to be a repeat of a land-clearing "rort" won by Australia in the 1997 Kyoto Protocol.
It is exhilarating and I can see how some teams that lack moral clarity and have a weakness of leadership can take this sense of empowerment and use it as an excuse to bash women, rort the salary cap and generally act like dicks etc.
Eating out in South-East Asia sounds ridiculously cheap to Australians; making mobile phone calls in Africa appears to be a total rip-off; your cheap US meal is a rort once you tip the surly wait staff.
Zimbabwe Speaker, was trounced in the first Parliamentary elections and that was despite his best efforts to rort the count and his best efforts to intimidate, harass and oppress the people of Zimbabwe.
I can't remember the last time I encountered an Australianism that was totally new to me, like this. I quite often run into regional American slang with which I'm unfamiliar, and it's always exciting when I do, but as a Brit I always identified more closely with Australians (and hence their lingo) than with Americans.
Would love to know the etymology of rort. I bet it's some weird Gaelic thing; that would explain why it's so strange to me.
Well, I've reinstalled my dickey OED and it's not much help. Apparently it's a back-formation from rorty, adj. (also raughty) "of dubious propriety" (among other senses) which is of course "of obscure origin" (OED-speak for "sorry we haven't a clue").
The only usages it gives of the verb form are as gerunds - rorting used as a noun.
Funnily enough I wasn't aware of how Australian (and NZ, baaaa!) it was or I might have been a bit more self-conscious about bandying it around. Perhaps what I'm confessing is that it's not one of those words that Australians recognise as being Australian, like sheila.
It's not one of those Aussie-cliché words which everyone knows are Australian. But that only goes to strengthen its status as a true Australianism (and New Zealandism, baaaa!)
yarb commented on the word rort
Usage by bilby on red or green.
June 15, 2011
bilby commented on the word rort
It's beloved of newspaper headlines because it's so compact and abrupt.
TAX CLAIMS RORT.
BANK RORT PROBE.
That kind of thing.
June 15, 2011
yarb commented on the word rort
I can't remember the last time I encountered an Australianism that was totally new to me, like this. I quite often run into regional American slang with which I'm unfamiliar, and it's always exciting when I do, but as a Brit I always identified more closely with Australians (and hence their lingo) than with Americans.
Would love to know the etymology of rort. I bet it's some weird Gaelic thing; that would explain why it's so strange to me.
June 15, 2011
yarb commented on the word rort
Well, I've reinstalled my dickey OED and it's not much help. Apparently it's a back-formation from rorty, adj. (also raughty) "of dubious propriety" (among other senses) which is of course "of obscure origin" (OED-speak for "sorry we haven't a clue").
The only usages it gives of the verb form are as gerunds - rorting used as a noun.
June 15, 2011
bilby commented on the word rort
Funnily enough I wasn't aware of how Australian (and NZ, baaaa!) it was or I might have been a bit more self-conscious about bandying it around. Perhaps what I'm confessing is that it's not one of those words that Australians recognise as being Australian, like sheila.
June 15, 2011
yarb commented on the word rort
It's not one of those Aussie-cliché words which everyone knows are Australian. But that only goes to strengthen its status as a true Australianism (and New Zealandism, baaaa!)
June 15, 2011
oroboros commented on the word rort
According to NPR's Says You: a rowdy party or celebration.
May 19, 2012
possibleunderscore commented on the word rort
You can't rort the rort.
May 11, 2022