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Culchie vs Bogger - What's the difference?

culchie | bogger |

As nouns the difference between culchie and bogger

is that culchie is a rural person while bogger is someone associated with or who works in a bog.

culchie

English

Noun

(en noun)
  • (Dublin, slang, pejorative, offensive) A rural person. Dublin English: evolution and change p. 106, by Raymond Hickey. John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2005. ISBN: 90-272-4895-8.
  • * 1987 , (Roddy Doyle), (The Commitments) , King Farouk, Dublin:
  • 1. Only culchies shop in Clery's but, said Billy.
  • * 1991 , Management Centre Europe, Industrial relations Europe , Volume 19, Issue 264.
  • New European Social Affairs Commissioner (Padraig Flynn), 53, is a flamboyant wheeler-dealer of a kind common in Irish (and American) political life. For most of his quarter-century in Ireland's parliament, he was regarded as the archetypal "culchie ", Dublin slang for an unpolished, reactionary rural type.
  • * 2005 , Raymond Hickey, Dublin English: evolution and change , John Benjamins Publishing Company.
  • A dismissive attitude towards rural accents was all too prevalent: accents outside Dublin being described as 'culchie , bogger, mucker' accents.

    References

    bogger

    English

    Etymology 1

    From .

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • Someone associated with or who works in a bog.
  • * 2000 Lorraine Heath. Never Love a Cowboy , page 51,
  • “I was a bogger afore the war—”
    “A bogger ?”
    “Yep. I was the one sent to get the cattle out of the muddy bogs and thickets.”
  • (Australia, slang) A man who catches nippers (snapping prawns). 1966 , Sidney John Baker, The Australian language , page 223.
  • (Ireland, derogatory) Someone not from a city.
  • (Ireland, derogatory) Someone not from Dublin (from outside the ).
  • (Newfoundland, Labrador) A dare, a task that children challenge each other to complete. “bogger”], entry in 2004 [1990, George Morley Story, W. J. Kirwin, John David Allison Widdowson, Dictionary of Newfoundland English .
  • (Australia, Western Australia, slang) Someone who works to shovel ore or waste rock underground. “bogger”, entry in 1989 , Joan Hughes, Australian words and their origins .
  • * 1962 , Bill Wannan, Modern Australian humour , page 176,
  • Polish Joe was a bogger , a man who shifted unbelievable quantities of dirt away from the face from which it had been blown, and into trucks for dumping in the underground bins each day.
  • (Australia, slang) A toilet.
  • (Northern England, derogatory, slang) Someone of the goth, skate, punk, or emo subculture.
  • Etymology 2

    From bugger.

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • Used particularly as an epithet or term of camaraderie or endearment''. “Bogger”, entry in 1990 , Leslie Dunkling, ''A dictionary of epithets and terms of address .
  • * 1986 , Ian Breakwell. Ian Breakwell's diary, 1964-1985 ,
  • "You bloody bogger ...!
  • * 1998 , Alan Sillitoe, The Broken Chariot ,
  • "You're a funny bogger', though. I never could mek yo' out. Ye're just like one of the lads, but sometimes there's a posh ' bogger trying to scramble out."
  • * 1992 , Alan Sillitoe, Saturday night and Sunday morning ,
  • "The dirty bogger ! He's got a fancy woman! Nine times a week!"

    References

    * British: ** 2005 , Simon Elmes, Talking for Britain: a journey through the nation's dialects . * Ireland: ** 2006 , Eric Partridge, The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English: A-I . ** 1983 , Irving L. Allen, The language of ethnic conflict: social organization and lexical culture .