G2G pass

This is sometimes referred to as G2G pass declaration or G2G declaration pass but is in full G2G pass registration and declaration. This is the authorisation that is required if you wish to travel to Western Australia.

ZG: 5

Sadly we were all good to go for a very brief period and then the borders were closed again.

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Sue ButlerComment
cough-shame

We are now suddenly acutely aware of the dangers involved in the simple cough or sneeze, particularly when the person coughing is not wearing a mask.

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Sue ButlerComment
coronavirus clapping

The populace took to standing outside or on their balconies, verandahs, fire escapes or any vantage point they could legally reach at a certain time of the day and clapping their hands, banging pots and pans, making a racket in any way available to them, to express their support for those at the frontline of the pandemic

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Sue ButlerComment
ACAB

This is an acronym formed from All Cops Are Bastards, a slogan which emerged early in the 20th century from groups resisting governments and government authority.

ZG: 8

The impetus for this acronym came from America but it proved to be quite popular in Australia as well.

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Sue ButlerComment
suicide first aid

We have all been encouraged to be alert to the possibility that someone we know is in some kind of crisis, and to ask the simple question How are you feeling? rather than shy away from the difficulty.

ZG: 5

This is a word launched by a public campaign so it remains to be seen whether it really takes in the community or not.

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Sue ButlerComment
BIPOC

This year has seen the adoption of the acronym BIPOC standing for ‘Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour’. The idea is that this is a unifying grouping for all people who are not white.

ZG: 3

This one is low frequency and will, I think, pass us by.

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Sue ButlerComment
bushfire brain

The inability to think clearly and make decisions has been called bushfire brain when it arises from the overwhelming devastation and loss caused by bushfire.

ZG: 6

Sadly this was something that affected a number of people in the community.

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Sue ButlerComment
green plum

This is the fruit of a small tree, Buchanania obovata, which is native to the woodland areas of northern Australia. It has a small green fruit which is plum-shaped, and so the name green plum.

ZG: 4

This will remain low frequency until the fruit is for sale commercially. After that we will have to see how popular it becomes.

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Sue ButlerComment
super shot

This is a shot at goal taken in the last five minutes of a netball game from the outer part of the goal circle, and is rewarded by a second shot.

ZG: 4

A piece of netball jargon so well-known to a section of the community but not known by others.

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Sue ButlerComment
cottage core

This is an aesthetic in fashion and design which tries to recreate the simplicity, naturalness, wholesomeness and self-sufficiency of country living.

ZG: 5

The pandemic has produced some surprising responses. The idyll of rural life has been popular but the pandemic certainly gave it a boost.

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Sue ButlerComment
adaptive clothing

This is clothing which is designed to be easy to manage for people with various disabilities, but at the same time well-designed and fashionable.

ZG: 4

A niche market but a worthy goal and a simple and straightforward name.

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Sue ButlerComment
net zero

Our goal is net zero, short for net zero carbon emissions, which we hope to reach by 2050. That means that the carbon we emit is cancelled out by what we take away and the bottom line is zero.

ZG: 9

This term has high frequency which will undoubtedly continue as we fail to come to grips with the necessary measures to save the environment.

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Sue ButlerComment
fakeaway

There is a move towards making favourite takeaways at home, thus reducing the cost and perhaps improving the health value of such meals.

ZG: 6

There has been a lot of COVID humour directed at the home cooking that has been attempted this year as a remedy for boredom. There has also been a lot of UBER eating that has inspired this joke.

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Sue ButlerComment
panda bashing

The term panda bashing has low frequency but it sits in a well-established set of bashing terms so it has a solid foundation and is supported by its antonym panda hugger, and by the term panda diplomacy.

ZG: 4

Despite the amount of panda bashing that has been done this year, the term does not have huge currency.

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Sue ButlerComment
virtual fence

This is a notional barrier established by selecting a set of GPS points which are then programmed into an collar fitted with a GPS reader and a device which gives an electric shock.

ZG: 3

An interesting word from agriculture but the system is still in its early days yet. It may get more traction when we see cows apparently running around in unfenced paddocks.

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Sue ButlerComment
giftician

This word, created by a sales and marketing group, was pronounced by the Plain English Foundation to be one of their Worst Words of 2015.

ZG: 5

The word is likely to attract some attention from those people who hate it and wish it would go away.

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Sue ButlerComment
smishing

Smishing is the use of SMS messaging for fraudulent purposes, so it breaks down into SMS and phishing.

ZG: 4

This is not a common term, even for those who have been smished.

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Sue ButlerComment
nose-pinching

This one is not common but it caught my eye in a political article recently. Indeed it does seem to occur in either form in the context of politics where you are confronted by two options, neither of which comes up smelling like roses.

ZG: 3

The problem with this word is that however strong the stink from politics, our politicians don’t seem to be able to smell it.

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Sue ButlerComment
doomscrolling

This was the word which Macquarie Dictionary chose as its 2020 Word of the Year, giving a name to what we have all been doing over the course of the year prompted by bushfires, floods and the pandemic. We have been compulsively scrolling through the news on the latest disaster.

ZG: 6

Although this is an apt coinage and useful considering what we have been through, I am not sure of its currency.

We did not acquire the word for this activity until late in the year, taking it from American English where the suggestion is that it had been around since 2018 but achieved mainstream use when some American psychologists decided it was time to give people advice on how to stop this addictive habit. That was in the middle of the year. An American journalist made a feature of it and a few months later we were doomscrolling with the best of them.

An alternative word is doomsurfing.

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