slushy n.
1. a cook, or assistant cook.
Man o’ War’s Man (1843) 159: ‘Come, old Slushyfists [...] Doesn’t hear the call?’ ‘O yes, Bird, we hears the call,’ growled the one-armed cook. | ||
, | Sl. Dict. | |
Sportsman 18 Feb. 2/1: Notes on News [...] The chief cook, slush, and butler. | ||
Sl. Dict. | ||
Two Years abaft Mast 261: An unexpected roll of the ship sent both pig and cook sliding into the lee-scuppers. [...] There was ‘Slushy’ sometimes over, sometimes under the pig . | ||
Sheffield Indep. 23 Dec. 15/3: The owner of the establishment was ‘cook, slush, and bottle-washer’ in one. | ||
Deemster I 211: The cook, better known as the slushy, came up the hatchways with a huge saucepan. | ||
Mysterious Beggar 256: Slushy had been a ship’s cook. | ||
Aus. Sl. Dict. 76: Slushy, a cook. | ||
‘G.S.’ in Roderick (1967–9) II 2: In the steamer’s slushy alley, where the souls of men are dead. | ||
Bulletin (Sydney) 10 Dec. 18/1: I useter think ’e wuz doin’ odd jobs fur the cook [...]. But the slushy said ’e didn’t ’inder Fred [...]. | ||
Bush Honeymoon 327: There were among them [...] camp cooks, their offsiders, dog-stiffeners, men that spent their time on the marsoopial fence, and bush slushies. | ||
St Helens Mist (OR) 11 May5/3: Berth deck slusher — Messmen who wait on the tables of the crew. | ||
(con. WWI) Soldier and Sailor Words 261: Slushy: Ship’s cook. | ||
Gone Nomad 14: I had to take my turn at [...] as ‘slushy’ to ‘Doughboy’ Terry, the cook. | ||
(con. 1870s) Te Waimate (1954) 127: 1 cook’s mate, generally known as the offsider or ‘slushy’. | ||
Riverslake 147: When a teacher with your degrees travels round from camp to camp working as a slushie, a lot of people want to know why. | ||
Restless Men 105: ‘Kitchen?’ Chikker cried, aghast. ‘Bloody slushies?’. | ||
Death in Church 85: A grey-headed woman was crying in a corner—‘The part-time slushy,’ said Porterman [OED]. |
2. (Aus./N.Z.) a cook’s assistant, esp. for a shearing gang.
Argus (Melbourne) 20 Sept. 13/6: Sundays are the most trying days of all say the cuisiniers, ‘for then they have nothing to do but to growl.’ This man’s assistant is called ‘the slusher.’. | ||
‘The Green-hand Rouseabout’ in Roderick (1967–9) I 322: Stiff and aching green-hand stretches — ‘Slushy’ rings the bullock-bell. | ||
‘A Rough Shed’ in Roderick (1972) 465: We hate the boss-of-the-board as the shearers’ ‘slushy’ hates the shearers’ cook. | ||
Sun. Times (Perth) 13 Dec. 1/1: The jovial kitchen slushy [...] prepares the prog. | ||
Bulletin (Sydney) 20 Oct. 11/4: When strangers entered the Heads they would ask, with curiosity, what the amazing thing was; and the steward, the cook, the slushy, the deck-sweep and the coal-passer would reply frankly that they didn’t know. | ||
Moods of Ginger Mick 41: An’ if yeh want a slushy, or a station overseer, / Or a tinker, or a tailor, or a snob. | ‘The Push’ in||
‘Bob the Baker and British Breeding’ in Roderick (1972) 924: I started as slushy and was promoted to spud-peeling. | ||
AS XXXIII:3 168: slushy, n. A cook’s helper. | ‘Australian Cattle Lingo’ in||
‘Whisper All Aussie Dict.’ in Kings Cross Whisper (Sydney) xl 4/4: slushy: Prisoners employed in gaol kitchens. | ||
Burn 3: They kept me at Sydney showground twelve days. Slushie in the officers’ mess. |
3. any unskilled assistant; a servant, thus a derogatory label.
Fact’ry ’Ands 100: Ther slush wanted t’ boost me off ther mat, but I sez my biz was of ther ’ighest himport. | ||
Sport (Adelaide) 6 July 13/1: They Say [...] That A new booth was opened at the Adelaide Oval last Saturday week, Carl barman and Onser slushy. | ||
(con. WWI) Gloss. Sl. [...] in the A.I.F. 1921–1924 (rev. t/s) n.p.: slushey. A mess orderly. | ||
Coonardoo 273: A slushie – damned rouse-about. | ||
Riverslake 133: If Silver wants to make a slushy of himself, that’s up to him! | ||
Ridgey-Didge Oz Jack Lang 45: Slushy Kitchen worker in prison. |
In compounds
(Aus.) a fat lamp, a wick placed in a dish of fat.
Who are You? 45: The slush-lamp shone with a smoky light. | ||
Argus (Melbourne) 20 Sept. 13/6: Occasionally the men will give Christy Minstrel concerts, when they illuminate the wool-shed with slush-lamps, and invite all on the station. | ||
‘A Rough Shed’ in Roderick (1972) 465: Last Sunday night: slush lamps at long intervals on table. | ||
Bulletin (Sydney) 23 Nov. 32/2: I rolled up there an’ then, an’ swum that billabong at midnight; an’ the larst I saw of Professor De Quinlan was him in his shirt an’ clodhoppers, chasin’ an escaped beetle with a slush-lamp. | ||
‘A Bush Girl’ in Roderick (1967–9) II 311: She reads, by slush-lamp light, maybe. | ||
Dict. of Aus. Words And Terms 🌐 SLUSH-LAMP — Bush lamp. | ||
(con. 1830s–60s) All That Swagger 75: An hour or two would be set apart for lessons by the light of a slush lamp. |