[WWI] Diggers

Douglas Anderson djandersonza at yahoo.com
Wed Jun 13 08:49:48 EDT 2007


And from www.Wiktionary.org
   
  digger    From Wiktionary  
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            Contents[hide]
    
   1 English     
      1.1 Pronunciation   
      1.2 Etymology   
      1.3 Noun     
         1.3.1 Translations   
         1.3.2 See also 


   //     
  [edit] English  
  [edit] Pronunciation    
       
      Rhymes: -ɪ¨Àə(r) 
  
  [edit] Etymology    
   (Sense 3) Derived from Australian Colonial goldfields terminology. The term represents the mateship of common interests and activities where most of the population were gold miners, and almost everybody was a mate, a "digger", with a common cause against the troopers, the traps, the mining licence inspectors. See also cobber. 
  
  [edit] Noun            Singular
digger
      Plural
diggers

  digger (plural diggers)
    
   A large piece of machinery that digs up holes.   
   One who digs.   
   (Australian English) An Australian soldier. 
  
  [edit] Translations        A large piece of machinery that digs up holes[Show]
              
   Finnish: kaivinkone 
    

        One who digs[Show]
              
   Finnish: kaivaja 
    

        An Australian soldier[Show]

Douglas Anderson <djandersonza at yahoo.com> wrote:


    From Wikipedia.org
   
  Digger is New Zealand and Australian military slang term for soldiers from New Zealand and Australia. It originated during World War I.
  There are numerous theories about the origin of the term. Before the war, the term "digger" had been widely used in Australasia to mean a miner, or a Kauri gum digger in New Zealand. On 25 April 1915, General Sir Ian Hamilton sent a message to the commander of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC), General William Birdwood, following the landing at Gallipoli. It contained the postscript: "P.S.¡ªYou have got through the difficult business, now you have only to dig, dig, dig, until you are safe." However, there is no hard evidence to support the theory that Hamilton's message is the reason why digger was applied to ANZAC troops in general. W. H. Downing, in Digger Dialects (1919), a glossary of words and phrases used by Australian personnel during the war, says that Digger was first used to mean a New Zealand or Australian soldier in 1916. It appears to have become popular among New Zealand troops, before being adopted by Australians. The word was not in wide
 use amongst soldiers until 1917.
  While New Zealanders would call each other "Digger", all other nationalities, including Australians, tended to call them "Kiwis". The equivalent slang for a British soldier was "Tommy" from Tommy Atkins. However, while the Anzacs would happily refer to themselves as "Diggers", British soldiers generally resented being called "Tommy".
  Throughout Australia when one refers to "digger", one is referring to the Australian Army.
  Between 1998 and 2003, the term was used in the name of a team in the Victorian Football League, the Bendigo Diggers. This was partly in reference to Bendigo's history as a centre of the gold-mining industry. The team changed its nickname to "Bombers" when it became a feeder club for Essendon. In 2001, Athletics Australia suggested that it would use "Diggers" as the nickname of the Australian athletics team. The proposal was withdrawn after a public outcry and protest from the RSL (Returned and Services League of Australia).
  John Campbell Ross (born March 11, 1899) is the last surviving Digger from World War I.

"J. Michael Vice" <jmikl at cmc.net> wrote:
          Just finished watching once again one of my favorite DVDs: "Oh! What A Lovely War".  As I was seeing the Aussies lying about and singing "One Staff Officer Jumped Right Over the Other Staff Officer's Back" a question came up...
   
  Call me ignorant, but how did the Aussies come to be known as Diggers?

    
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