discarded, asked to leave, superseded: "Have you been picked for the footy team this weekend?" "No, I've been cracked off" OR "Is Julie still going out with Brian" "No, she cracked him off" - Comes from the sport of campdrafting where, if you are disqualified, a whip is cracked to let you know and you are said to have ...
Meaning: to try to kiss someone; to try to pick someone up. “She's been cracking onto him all night” is an example of how you might use this Australian expression.
A Cracker, Australian slang for climate change denial or personal inaction on climate change.
broken without separation of parts; fissured. damaged; injured. Informal. eccentric; mad; daffy: a charming person, but a bit cracked. broken in tone, as the voice.
In Australian slang, to have an erection.
5. Sheila = Girl. Yes, that is the Australian slang for girl.
quotations ▼ (countable, UK, Ireland, Australia, slang) A woman of loose morals.
The true origin of the gaming term "cracked" had its origins from the game Apex Legends. In Apex, when you break an opponent's shield, an audible cracking noise occurs, indicating the opponent has about 100 health remaining.
cracked (adj.)
mid-15c., "broken by a sharp blow," past-participle adjective from crack (v.). From 1560s as "burst, split." Meaning "mentally unsound" is by 1690s. (compare crack-brain "crazy fellow"). The equivalent Greek word was used in this sense by Aristophanes.
to break suddenly with an explosive sound the tree branch unexpectedly cracked under our weight. Synonyms & Similar Words. popped. snapped. shattered.
Snag. Definition: sausage, also used to refer to sliced bread and sausage combo, Australian hot dog. Example: “Grab a few snags for the party tonight!” Snag isn't just a part of Australian vocabulary; it's part of Australian culture.
Aussie Word of the Week
Aussies have a plethora of names for sausages and the ways and contexts in which we eat them. Snag is perhaps the most famous slang term for sausages, followed closely by banger. Many of us grab a sausage sanga down at the local hardware store.
The expression has been compared to the American English equivalent "no problem". In their book Australian Language & Culture: No Worries!, authors Vanessa Battersby, Paul Smitz and Barry Blake note: "No worries is a popular Australian response akin to 'no problems', 'that's OK' or 'sure thing'."
traps, trappers or jacks – police. These Australianisms have been largely replaced by the international cops, coppers, pigs or bacon. However the older, more affectionate wallopers is also still used.
It was founded in 2005 by Jack O'Brien. In 2007, Cracked had a couple of hundred thousand unique users per month and 3 or 4 million page views. In June 2011, it reached 27 million page views, according to comScore.
Cracked can be a verb or an adjective.
adjective [usually ADJECTIVE noun] If you describe someone as jammy, you mean that they are very lucky because something good has happened to them, without their making much effort or deserving such luck. [British, informal]
(Australia, slang, mildly vulgar) An extremely amusing person or thing.
Definition of 'manky'
1. worthless, rotten, or in bad taste. 2. dirty, filthy, or bad.
Daks: Australians call their trousers 'daks'. If someone mentions 'tracky daks', they're talking about sweatpants.
However, in Australian, Canadian, and Scottish English, running shoes and runners are synonymous terms used to refer to sneakers; with the latter term also used in Hiberno-English. Tennis shoes is another term used in Australian, and North American English.
As an exclamation, yeet broadly means "yes". But it can also be a greeting, or just an impassioned grunt, like a spoken dab.*