Use "aussie" in a sentence
aussie example sentences
aussie
1. I left the Aussie rooting stories and moved to Ish
2. He cracked a joke with the Aussie guys playing pool
3. Aussie politics are a joke anyway,' Fred said, killing the
4. “Archie Lane you old Aussie dingo where are you show yourself?” I tried to sit up and find him but the nurse pushed me back gently back saying
5. Sitting beside me now he began to speak about the Aussie landings so I made myself more comfortable as he said
6. ” Archie shouted across good on you cobber I hope that your Aussie mate here is going to get an invite?” Bert replied
7. I pulled my pencil and paper over to me and wrote my last letters to Mabel, Beth and to Bill Domby I also wrote to Archie Lane the Aussie we had met in Egypt and who had served on Gallipoli
8. But he then yanked open the car door, for which I was not grateful because I swept passed him on a wave of bubbling water that an Aussie surfer would have given his right arm to ride
9. I’m sure the ‘Cordon Bleu’ French chef who invented the dish would be delighted to know that it has now been re-invented by an Aussie
10. Spencer came to us through the Aussie Rescue Society when he was four months old, and Brook immediately adopted him
11. So our male Aussie was raised by a female Rottweiler and this upbringing not only had a calming influence on the Aussie, but showed great tolerance on Brook’s part, which was a good thing
12. Because Brook also died with cancer, this time at the early age of seven, leaving the Aussie she mentored grieving and alone
13. Higher interest rates are attractive to foreign investors and as a result they will need to buy Aussie dollars in order to invest in Australia, this of course will drive up the demand and price of the currency and lessen the supply of it
14. Like all good and true Aussie blokes, Scumble had no use for displays of emotion
15. He took responsibility for himself – unlike the “tough Aussie bloke” sneering What are ya? from the security of a bunch of equally intolerant mates
16. com should be up this week with all the real hip hop and that Aussie true crime blog shit from me and other dudes locked up round the state
17. The mixtape reached downloads in the thousands with some of its singles finding their way on to Aussie radio
18. Think we ought to off the Aussie and see how sweet her honey is?”
19. Anyway, he knew this Aussie guy- a real shithead- I think he was his supplier, but he wouldn’t tell me that
20. It was this Aussie kid- dont know his name- that laid it all out for us
21. Tripp - “Sue fell from a horse in Aussie; two years back
22. She called me from Aussie and invited us over
23. Here's my formula for a safe and hassle-free camping trip: quality equipment, meticulous preparation, the Aussie outdoors and perfect weather
24. Aussie intonation slipping out of his mouth like a drunk fal ing out of pub at
25. the cheerful Aussie, the job wasn’t so much fun anymore without Vlad to
26. The Mob (Aussie for organised crime) lent a hand and
27. Aussie who may wander out into the streets after hours
28. Had he been watching the low-budget auction programme or the Aussie soap once he had finished his lunch of pasta with bacon on a TV tray in front of the large leather sofa he probably would not have reacted to the noise he thought he heard
29. So, for all you non Aussies out there, I wanted to share a few priceless gems from the Australian language with you courtesy of the Macquarie Dictionary (with Fruitloopmum explanations) and some great Aussie similes:
30. to be an Aussie
31. Even though Thompson and Smith held the same rank, Thompson believed his twenty year head start in the Police force should offer him some semblance of superiority over the Aussie upstart
32. But then thank God for that good old Aussie sense of fair play, because the patient
33. played the jungle guide to perfection with his Aussie slouch hat, safari shorts, khaki shirt,
34. On Sundays, Ralph and Betty would sometimes host a few expat Aussie thespians such as the great actor Leo McKern, who later became famous as Number Two in Patrick McGoohan’s The Prisoner and as Horace Rumple in Rumpole of the Bailey; Bill Kerr, who I knew as the innocent stooge to Sid James’s scheming spiv in Hancock’s Half Hour; and Shirley Abicair, who sang bewitching songs on the television, accompanied by the zither
35. Let’s return briefly to Barry Marshall, our bacteria-gulping Aussie hero who cracked the ulcer code
36. The Aussie dollar is at an all time high - at the time of writing it is almost at par with the U
37. Many readers will painfully recall overseas trips in years gone by when the Aussie dollar was worth around 50 cents!