daggy
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈdæɡi/
Audio (General Australian): (file) - Rhymes: -æɡi
Adjective
daggy (comparative daggier or more daggy, superlative daggiest or most daggy)
- (Australia, slang) Uncool, unfashionable, but comfortably so.
- 2004, Tim Winton, “Abbreviation”, in The Turning, UK Paperback edition, Picador, page 27:
- "But I remember everything about that day. What everyone was wearing, all the daggy things people said in the car on the way into town. The smell of stubble, upholstery. The taste of tomato in my throat from lunch."
- 2006, Debra Byrne, Not Quite Ripe: A Memoir[1], page 49:
- We wore hippie clothes, looking more daggy than cool.
- 2008, Bella Vendramini, Biting the Big Apple: A Memoir of Life, Love (okay and Sex) in New York City, unnumbered page:
- I began to feel even more daggy when Bianca swanned me around to meet her sexy, skinny and beautiful friends.
- 2011, Joanne Van Os, The Secret of the Lonely Isles[2], page 1:
- The daggiest house in the Bay, that was how people talked about the Isherwood House.
- 2011, Chris Buch, Hello Sunshine: A Blitz Kid's Journey to the Sunshine State[3], page 288:
- Actually this wasn′t too bad as a jazz venue, being in the daggiest pub in the daggiest part of Capalaba which, in 2004 was still a pretty daggy suburb.
- 2024 August 12, Scott Gallopo, “The Solar Opposites Do An Intervention” (15:32 from the start), in Solar Opposites[4], season 5, episode 7, spoken by Gavin (Clancy Brown):
- “Yeah, I know, I-I was starting to like her too, even though she said I dress "daggy," whatever that means.”
Derived terms
Further reading
- “dag n.2”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang, Jonathon Green, 2016–present