Baffie

A. Someone easily confused, ignorant, or naïve.
B. Looking at or examining, var. of ‘check out’; “have a baffie”.
C. A slipper, esp. one that is old and worn out.
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1/10

Bampot

A. An Indonesian meat stew, usually made with lamb.
B. A foolish, annoying, or obnoxious person.
C. Australian slang for an attractive person, usually a woman.
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2/10

Bealach

A. A narrow mountain pass.
B. A type of climbing plant with coarse, rough vines.
C. A wooden staff, often spruce, used in druidic rituals.
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3/10

Chuddies

A. Slang for a pair of foolish characters, esp. in theatrical circles.
B. To shiver or tremble from illness, “get the chuddies”.
C. Short trousers. Now usually: underwear; underpants.
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4/10

Geggie

A. A person’s mouth, var. of ‘shut up”; “shut your geggie”.
B. A Scottish hillock, typically found near a river's source.
C. Collective name for a group of lizards; “a geggie of lizards”.
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5/10

Jibbons

A. Term for tassels, esp. when on clothes.
B. Spring onions.
C. Tong-like tools used in silversmithing.
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6/10

Sitooterie

A. A colourful relative of the hummingbird, native to Fiji.
B. A secluded area within a building for people to sit away from others.
C. A valley or gulch, esp. one that is flooded.
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7/10

Spret

A. To jolt, leap, or jump up quickly. Usually from sitting.
B. To tear, split, or burst, esp. a seam. Usually with down, up.
C. To spread in a culinary sense. Usually butter on bread, toast.
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8/10

Transitioner

A. Item of clothing intended to be worn during the changing of the seasons.
B. Term for a postgraduate before they get a full-time job.
C. A device used to amplify or switch electronic signals and electrical power.
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9/10

Coorie

A. Expression of surprise, shock, disbelief. Usually positive.
B. To crouch or keep low, esp. for protection. Usually with down, in.
C. To search, hunt or stalk, var. of ‘hunt down’; “have a coorie”.
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10/10