Pommy vs Pomme - What's the difference?
pommy | pomme |
(Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, derogatory) A pom; a person of British descent, a Briton; an Englishman.
* 1931 , , Back to Bool Bool ,
* 2007 , Tony Parsons, Silver in the Sun ,
* 2009 , Robert Holman, On Paths of Ash: The Extraordinary Story of an Australian Prisoner of War ,
(Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, sometimes, pejorative) English; British.
* 1991 , A Stranger's Trust , Emma Richmond:
* 2003 , Susan Bradley Smith, 12: Rhetoric, reconciliation and other national pastimes: showcasing contemporary Australian theatre in London'', Elizabeth Schafer, Susan Bradley Smith (editors), ''Playing Australia: Australian Theatre and the International Stage ,
* {{quote-newsgroup
, title=Hello, Hello
, group=aus.cars
, author=feral
, date=February 24
, year=2005
, passage=athol wrote:> IIRC, "hood lining" is the more pommy terminology. :-)
(heraldiccharge) A roundel vert (green circular spot), resembling an apple. Also pomey.
As adjectives the difference between pommy and pomme
is that pommy is (australia|new zealand|south africa|sometimes|pejorative) english; british while pomme is (heraldry|of a cross) having the ends terminating in rounded protuberances or single balls.As a noun pommy
is (australia|new zealand|south africa|derogatory) a pom; a person of british descent, a briton; an englishman.pommy
English
Alternative forms
* pommieNoun
(pommies)page 140,
- Though Sir Oswald had taken on enough London veneer to be sneered at as a pommy in certain Australian circles, he had never acquired the high-class Englishman?s apparent equanimity or indifference before the prospect of cuckolding.
unnumbered page,
- Rhona nodded her agreement. ‘That?s a very interesting answer from a new Aussie – and a Pommy into the bargain,’ she added.
unnumbered page,
- During one of these acts of bravery by the English pilots I saw a great big tough Aussie with tears of frustration streaming down his face. He was shouting, ‘You magnificent, stupid Pommy bastard!’
Synonyms
* limey (US)Adjective
(-)- A gleam of humour, a moment of beautiful pommy arrogance.
page 201,
- That is, of course, until Australian movie stars like Cate Blanchett and Nicole Kidman proved that they could sell tickets in the West End so long as they could play at being what Rees calls a ‘movie siren’ with a convincing ‘fake pommy accent’.
citation