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Dunny is Australian/New Zealand slang for a toilet. Dunny may also mean: Dunny Goode (1929–2004), head football coach for Eastern New Mexico University "Dunny", nickname for Fred Dunlap (1859–1902), 19th century baseball player and manager "Dunnies", nickname for the Whitby Dunlops, a Canadian Major League Hockey team
"Dunny" or "dunny can" are Australian words for a toilet, particularly an outhouse. The combinations "dunny paper" and "dunny brush" are commonly encountered. [citation needed] For other uses of the word, see dunny (disambiguation). In suburban areas not connected to the sewerage, outhouses were not always built over pits.
Bottle-o: In Australia, you can only buy alcohol from licensed shops that specifically sell drinks. They’ve come to be known as bottle-o’s. They’ve come to be known as bottle-o’s.
Agro, as he appears in Agro's Cartoon Connection.. Agro is an Australian puppet and media personality, not owned although operated by comedian and voice artist Jamie Dunn.He was especially prominent on Australian television in the 1990s due to his co-hosting opposite Ann-Maree Biggar and Terasa Livingstone of Agro's Cartoon Connection, a children's program that was aired from 1989 to 1997 on ...
Dunedoo (/ ˈ d ʌ n i d uː / DUN-ee-doo) is a village of 1,021 inhabitants [1] situated within the Warrumbungle Shire of central western New South Wales, Australia.Dunedoo is well known to Australian travellers due to its distinctive name (Dunny is a colloquial Australian word for a toilet).
Shane Jacobson (born 18 March 1970) is an Australian actor, entertainer, director, writer, and comedian, best known as the "Dunny Man" for his performances as the eponymous character Kenny Smyth, a plumber working for a portable toilet rental company, in the 2006 film Kenny and the spin-off TV series, Kenny's World.
The vocabulary of Australia is drawn from many sources, including various dialects of British English as well as Gaelic languages, some Indigenous Australian languages, and Polynesian languages. [2] One of the first dictionaries of Australian slang was Karl Lentzner's Dictionary of the Slang-English of Australia and of Some Mixed Languages in 1892.
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